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INTRODUCCIÓN<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

correo respectivas.<br />

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

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

Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />

Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.


LIBROS<br />

ALONSO-RORÍGUEZ, ROSALBA, FEDERICO PAÉZ-OSUNA E ISMAEL<br />

GÁRATE-LIZÁRRAGA, 2004. El fitoplancton en la camaronicultura y<br />

larvicultura: Importancia <strong>de</strong> un buen manejo.-- México: <strong>Instituto</strong> <strong>de</strong><br />

<strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong> y Limnología, U.N.A.M., Comité Estatal <strong>de</strong> Sanidad<br />

Acuícola <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, 147 p.<br />

AYRES Jr., FRANK AND ELLIOT MENDELSON, 1991. Cálculo Diferencial e<br />

Integral. Tercera Edición.—México: McGraw-Hill/Interamericana <strong>de</strong><br />

México, 571 p.<br />

AYRES, GILBERT H., 1970. Análisis Químico Cuantitativo.—México: Harla, 740<br />

p.<br />

QUIÑÓNEZ VELÁZQUEZ, CASIMIRO Y JUAN FÉLIX ELORDUY GARAY,<br />

2004. Ambiente Y Pesquería <strong>de</strong> Pelágicos Menores en el Noroeste <strong>de</strong><br />

México.—<strong>Instituto</strong> Politécnico Nacional, CICIMAR, 186 p.<br />

SPIEGEL, MURRAY, R., 1970. Manual <strong>de</strong> Fórmulas y Tablas Matemáticas.<br />

2400 fórmulas y 60 tablas.—México: McGraw-Hill, 271 p.<br />

U.N.A.M., 1992. Universidad Nacional Autónoma <strong>de</strong> México. Imágenes <strong>de</strong> Hoy.<br />

México: U.N.A.M., 175 p.<br />

U.N A.M., 2002. La Ciencia en la UNAM a través <strong>de</strong>l Subsistema <strong>de</strong> la<br />

Investigación Científica.—México. UNAM, Coordinación <strong>de</strong> la Investigación<br />

Científica, 141 p.<br />

U.N.A.M., 2003. Forjadores <strong>de</strong> la Ciencia en la UNAM. Conferencias <strong>de</strong>l ciclo Mi<br />

vida en la Ciencia. Mayo-agosto <strong>de</strong> 2003.—México: UNAM, Coordinación <strong>de</strong> la Investigación<br />

Científica, 596 p.<br />

U.N.A.M., 2004. Agenda Estadística 2004.—México: UNAM, Dirección General<br />

<strong>de</strong> Planeación, 317 p.<br />

U.N.A.M., 2004. Cua<strong>de</strong>rno <strong>de</strong> Información Estadística Básica 1999-2003.<br />

Difusión Cultural.—México: UNAM, Dirección General <strong>de</strong> Planeación, 111<br />

p.<br />

TESIS<br />

AYALA BALDENEGRO, LEONARDO, 2004. Distribución <strong>de</strong> la concentración<br />

<strong>de</strong> metales pesados en sedimentos y su relación con organismos<br />

indicadores (Crassostrea spp. y Mytella spp.) en el Sistema Lagunar <strong>de</strong><br />

3


Guasave, Sinaloa. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Maestría. <strong>Instituto</strong> Politécnico Nacional,<br />

CIIDIR-Unidad Sinaloa, 73 p.<br />

DOMÍNGUEZ AYALA, JORGE ARMANDO, 2002. Fecundidad <strong>de</strong> la langosta<br />

espinosa Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) en el litoral <strong>de</strong> Nayarit. Tesis<br />

Profesional. Universidad Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, Facultad <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>, 58 p.<br />

GARCIA CONTRERAS, HUGO ALBERTO, 2004. Indice <strong>de</strong> potencial<br />

reproductivo <strong>de</strong> la langosta Panulirus gracilis (Decapoda: Palinuridae) en<br />

la costa centro-sur <strong>de</strong> Nayarit. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma<br />

<strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, Facultad <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong>, 51 p.<br />

GLUYAS MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA, 2004. Biología y dinámica poblacional<br />

<strong>de</strong> la macarela Scomber japonicus <strong>de</strong>l Golfo <strong>de</strong> California. Tesis <strong>de</strong><br />

Doctorado. Universidad Nacional Autónoma <strong>de</strong> México. Facultad <strong>de</strong><br />

<strong>Ciencias</strong>, División <strong>de</strong> Estudios <strong>de</strong> Posgrado, 151 p.<br />

GONZÁLEZ MORENO, BLANCA ROSA, 2002. Madurez sexual durante la<br />

actividad reproductiva <strong>de</strong> la langosta Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) en las<br />

costas <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, México (1990-1991). Tesis Profesional. Universidad<br />

Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, Facultad <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong>, 57 p.<br />

ORTEGA GUZMÁN, LORETO, 2004. Madurez gonádica <strong>de</strong> la langosta<br />

espinosa Panulirus inflatus (Decapoda: Palinuridae) en las costas <strong>de</strong><br />

Nayarit. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, Facultad <strong>de</strong><br />

<strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong>, 55 p.<br />

PÉREZ LINARES, JESÚS, 2001. Histopatología <strong>de</strong> postlarvas <strong>de</strong> camarón<br />

blanco Litopenaeus vannamei (=Penaeus vannamei) expuestas a la<br />

cianobacteria Schizothrix calcicola. Tesis Profesional. Universidad<br />

Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Baja California Sur, Area Interdisciplinaria <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>, 57 p.<br />

ROBLES CRUZ, GILBERTO, 2000. Estructura <strong>de</strong> la población <strong>de</strong> juveniles y su<br />

inci<strong>de</strong>ncia en la pesquería <strong>de</strong> las langostas Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) y<br />

P. gracilis Streets en el Sur <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa. Tesis Profesional. Universidad<br />

Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, Facultad <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong>, 62 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

AQUATIC ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 38, No. 4, 2004.<br />

BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE:<br />

Vol. 207, No. 2, October 2004.<br />

4


BOLETÍN ODINCARSA, IOC/UNESCO:<br />

No. 5, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

BOLETÍN DEL PORTAL OCEANICO, UNESCO:<br />

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

BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 5, 2004.<br />

Vol. 47, No. 6, 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 75, No. 3, November 2004.<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 4, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 18, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

COPEIA:<br />

No. 4, 2004.<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 11, November 2004.<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 77, Part. 7, July 2004.<br />

Vo. 77, Part. 8, August 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 3, February 2005.<br />

Vol. 134, No. 1, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />

Vol. 134, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005.<br />

EXPLORATIONS:<br />

Vol. 11, No. 1, Summer 2004.<br />

FAO AQUACULTURE NEWSLETTER:<br />

No. 31, July 2004.<br />

5


FAO FISHERIES CIRCULAR:<br />

No. 1001, 2004: Global Aquaculture Outlook in the Next Deca<strong>de</strong>s: An Analysis of<br />

National Aquaculture Production Forecasts to 2030.<br />

FAO FISHERIES REPORT:<br />

No. 738, 2004: Report of the Expert Consultation on Interactions Between<br />

Sea Turtles and Fisheries Within an Ecosystem Context. Rome, Italy, 9-12<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

No. 742, 2004: Report of the Third Intergovernmental Consultation on the<br />

Establishment of a Southwest Indian Ocean Fisheries Commission.<br />

Nairobi, Kenya, 27-30 January 2004.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 442, 2004: Application of risk assessment in the fish industry.<br />

No. 444, 2004: Assessment and Management of Seafood Safety and<br />

Quality.<br />

No. 452, 2004. Cambio Climático y Pesquerías regionales en el futuro:<br />

Análisis en Colaboración.<br />

No. 465, 2004: The Conservation and Management of Shared Fish Stocks:<br />

Legal and Economic Aspects.<br />

FARO, EL:<br />

No. 45, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 29, No. 11, November 2004.<br />

Vol. 29, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

GACETA BIOMÉDICAS:<br />

No. 12, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

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

No. 3771, 13 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3773, 6 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3774, 10 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3775, 13 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3776, 17 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3777, 20 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3778, 24 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

No. 3779, 27 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 8, December 2004.<br />

HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS:<br />

No. 26, October 2004.<br />

6


HUMANIDADES:<br />

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

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 8, December 2004.<br />

INDUSTRIA ACUÍCOLA:<br />

Vol. 1, No. 2, Diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

INGENIERÍA HIDRÁULICA EN MÉXICO:<br />

Vol. XVIII, No. 4, octubre-diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

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

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Special Issue No. 4, Fall 2004: NERRS research and Monitoring. A<br />

Nationally Integrated Program.<br />

Vol. 20, No. 3, Summer 2004.<br />

Vol. 20, No. 4, Fall 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 4, November 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 40, No. 3, June 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 10, October 2004.<br />

Vol. 34, No. 11, November 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 49, No. 6, November 2004.<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 281, 2004.<br />

Vol. 282, 2004.<br />

7


Vol. 283, 2004.<br />

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 11, November 2004.<br />

Vol. 21, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

NEW SCIENTIST:<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2472, November 6-12, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2473, November 13-19, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2474, November 20-26, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2475, November 27-December 3, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2476, December 4-10, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2477, December 11-17, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2478, December 18-24, 2004.<br />

Vol. 184, No. 2479/2480, December 5, 2004-January 7, 2005.<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON:<br />

Vol. 117, No. 3, 7 December 2004.<br />

Vol. 117, No. 4, 20 December 2004.<br />

TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 6, November 2004.<br />

U2000. CRÓNICA DE LA EDUCACIÓN SUPERIOR:<br />

No. 445, 10 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 4, August 2004.<br />

Vol. 12, No. 5, October 2004.<br />

Vol. 12, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

REIMPRESOS<br />

CARBALLO, JOSÉ LUIS, BENJAMÍN YÁNEZ AND HÉCTOR NAVA, 2004.<br />

Persistence of the sponge Suberites aurantiaca (Duchassaing and<br />

Michelotti, 1864) in an estuarine ecosystem (Pacific Coast, México).<br />

Bulletin of <strong>Mar</strong>ine Science, 75(3): 487-497.<br />

GLUYAS-MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA y JESÚS TALAVERA-MAYA, 2003.<br />

Composición por tallas y eda<strong>de</strong>s <strong>de</strong> las poblaciones <strong>de</strong> abulón Haliotis<br />

fulgens y H. corrugata <strong>de</strong> la zona <strong>de</strong> Bahía Tortugas, Baja California Sur,<br />

México. <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>Mar</strong>inas, 29(1): 89-101.<br />

GLUYAS-MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA, CASIMIRO QUIÑÓNEZ VELÁZQUEZ<br />

AND JESÚS TALAVERA MAYA, 2002. Effect of El Niño 1997-98 on the snail<br />

Astraea<br />

8


undosa (Wood) population along the Baja California Western Coast.<br />

Journal of Shellfish Research, 21(2): 831-834.<br />

GÓMEZ, SAMUEL, 2004. A new species of Enhydrosoma Boeck, 1872<br />

(Copepoda:<br />

Harpacticoida: Cletodidae) from the Eastern Tropical Pacific. Proceedings<br />

of the Biological Society of Washington, 117(4): 529-540.<br />

GÓMEZ, SAMUEL AND PEDRO MARTÍNEZ ARBIZU, 2004. First record of the<br />

genus<br />

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

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

Biología, U.N.A.M., Serie Zoología, 75(1): 121-134.<br />

RAMÍREZ FÉLIX, EVLIN AND HÉCTOR G. MANZO-MONROY, 2004.<br />

Comparación<br />

entre el uso <strong>de</strong> dos <strong>de</strong>rechos <strong>de</strong> acceso pesquero, concesiones y<br />

permisos, en la pesquería <strong>de</strong> erizo rojo <strong>de</strong> mar, Strongylocentrotus<br />

franciscanus (Agassiz) en Santo Tomás, Baja California, México.<br />

<strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>Mar</strong>inas, 30(4): 547-560.<br />

SIERRA-BELTRÁN, A.P., R. CORTÉS-ALTAMIRANO AND M.C. CORTÉS-<br />

LARA,<br />

2005. Occurrences of Prorocentrum minimum (Pavillard) in México.<br />

Harmful Algae, 4: 507-517.<br />

9


PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

AQUATIC ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 38, No. 4, 2004.<br />

Kirsten Ned<strong>de</strong>rmann, Monika Nausch, Effects of organic and inorganic nitrogen compounds on<br />

the activity of bacterial alkaline phosphatase, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004... 475 - 484<br />

Shin-ichi Nakano, Yuji Tomaru, Toshiya Katano, Atsushi Kaneda, Wataru Makino, Yuichiro<br />

Nishibe, Miho Hirose, Masashi Onji, Shin-Ichi Kitamura, Hi<strong>de</strong>taka Takeoka, The dynamics of<br />

microbial and herbivorous food webs in a coastal sea with special reference to intermittent nutrient<br />

supply from bottom intrusion, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004............................ 485 - 493<br />

Janne Soininen, Assessing the current related heterogeneity and diversity patterns of benthic<br />

diatom communities in a turbid and a clear water river, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec<br />

2004................................................................................................................................................ 495 - 501<br />

Cláudia Fileto, <strong>Mar</strong>lene S. Arcifa, Aloysio S. Ferrão-Filho, Lúcia Helena S. Silva, Influence of<br />

phytoplankton fractions on growth and reproduction of tropical cladocerans, Aquatic Ecology,<br />

Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................ 503 - 514<br />

morphology as a <strong>de</strong>fense mechanism against grazing by selected species of rotifers and<br />

cladocerans, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004...................................................... 515 - 524<br />

Joop Ringelberg, Erik van Gool, Michaela Brehm, Density and <strong>de</strong>pth variations of Daphnia<br />

multilocus genotypes during a summer period in Lake Maarsseveen, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38,<br />

Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................................... 525 - 535<br />

Radka Pichlová, Anke Weber, Brigitte Gosser, Leptodora kindtii survival in the laboratory, Aquatic<br />

Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004......................................................................................... 537 - 546<br />

Bernd Spänhoff, Norbert Kaschek, Elisabeth Irmgard Meyer, Laboratory investigation on<br />

community composition, emergence patterns and biomass of wood-inhabiting Chironomidae<br />

(Diptera) from a sandy lowland stream in Central Europe (Germany), Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38,<br />

Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................................... 547 - 560<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ina I. Orlova, Jim R. Muirhead, Pavel I. Antonov, Gregory Kh. Shcherbina, Yaroslav I.<br />

Starobogatov, G. I. Biochino, Thomas W. Therriault, Hugh J. MacIsaac, Range expansion of<br />

quagga mussels Dreissena rostriformis bugensis in the Volga River and Caspian Sea basin,<br />

Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004............................................................................ 561 - 573<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ina I. Orlova, Jim R. Muirhead, Pavel I. Antonov, Gregory Kh. Shcherbina, Yaroslav I.<br />

Starobogatov, G. I. Biochino, Thomas W. Therriault, Hugh J. MacIsaac, Range expansion of<br />

quagga mussels Dreissena rostriformis bugensis in the Volga River and Caspian Sea basin,<br />

Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004............................................................................ 561 - 573<br />

Jonas Nilsson, Roland Engkvist, Lars-Eric Persson, Long-term <strong>de</strong>cline and recent recovery of<br />

Fucus populations along the rocky shores of southeast Swe<strong>de</strong>n, Baltic Sea, Aquatic Ecology,<br />

Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................ 587 - 598<br />

Michaela A. Guest, Rod M. Connolly, Fine-scale movement and assimilation of carbon in<br />

saltmarsh and mangrove habitat by resi<strong>de</strong>nt animals, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec<br />

2004................................................................................................................................................ 599 - 609<br />

James G. Wilson, Niamh Forrest, Population dynamics, biomass and productivity of Limapontia<br />

<strong>de</strong>pressa (Gastropoda, Opisthobranchia) at Bull Island, Dublin, Ireland, Aquatic Ecology, Volume<br />

38, Issue 4, Dec 2004..................................................................................................................... 575 - 585<br />

BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE:<br />

Vol. 207, No. 2, October 2004.<br />

Research Note:<br />

Joseph R. Schulz, Alex G. Norton, and William F. Gilly<br />

The Projectile Tooth of a Fish-Hunting Cone Snail: Conus catus Injects Venom Into Fish Prey<br />

Using a High-Speed Ballistic Mechanism ............................................................................................77-79.<br />

Kazuhiko Koike, Mitsuru Jimbo, Ryuichi Sakai, Masami Kaeriyama, Koji Muramoto, Takehiko<br />

Ogata, Tadashi <strong>Mar</strong>uyama, and Hisao Kamiya<br />

Octocoral Chemical Signaling Selects and Controls Dinoflagellate Symbionts ..................................80-86.<br />

Symbiosis and Parasitology:<br />

10


Louise A. Lewis and Gisèle Muller-Parker<br />

Phylogenetic Placement of "Zoochlorellae" (Chlorophyta), Algal Symbiont of the Temperate Sea<br />

Anemone Anthopleura elegantissima ..................................................................................................87-92.<br />

Development and Reproduction:<br />

Kathryn MCDonald<br />

Patterns in Early Embryonic Motility: Effects of Size and Environmental Temperature on Vertical<br />

Velocities of Sinking and Swimming Echinoid Blastulae ...................................................................93-102.<br />

Ecology and Evolution:<br />

Scott Santagata<br />

A Waterborne Behavioral Cue for the Actinotroch Larva of Phoronis pallida (Phoronida) Produced<br />

by Upogebia pugettensis (Decapoda: Thalassini<strong>de</strong>a) .....................................................................103-115.<br />

Lisbeth Francis<br />

Microscaling: Why Larger Anemones Have Longer Cnidae ............................................................116-129.<br />

Andrew Kramer and Lisbeth Francis<br />

Predation Resistance and Nematocyst Scaling for Metridium senile and M. farcimen ...................130-140.<br />

Neurobiology and Behavior:<br />

Peter A. V. An<strong>de</strong>rson, Louise F. Thompson, and Craig G. Moneypenny<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for a Common Pattern of Pepti<strong>de</strong>rgic Innervation of Cnidocytes .....................................141-146.<br />

Abstracts from the 2004 Scientific Meetings of the <strong>Mar</strong>ine Biological Laboratory:<br />

Abstracts:<br />

Abstracts from the 2004 General Scientific Meetings of the <strong>Mar</strong>ine Biological Laboratory .............149-150.<br />

The Editor:<br />

The MBL Awards for 2004 ......................................................................................................................151.<br />

Behavior and Neurobiology:<br />

E. Brown, J. Hitt, F. Dodge, and R. Barlow<br />

Circadian Rhythms in Limulus Visual Sensitivity Compensate for Day-Night Changes in Light<br />

Intensity ...................................................................................................................................................152.<br />

Mira Guo, Fre<strong>de</strong>rick Dodge, and Robert Barlow<br />

Circadian Rhythms in the Locomotor Activity of Juvenile Horseshoe Crabs ..........................................152.<br />

T. Saito, K. Mori, and R. Barlow<br />

Circadian Clock: Where Is It Located in the Limulus Brain? ...................................................................153.<br />

Chuan-Chin Chiao, Emma J. Kelman, and Roger T. Hanlon<br />

Disruptive Body Patterning of Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) Requires Visual Information on Edges<br />

and Brightness of Objects on Natural Substrate Backgrounds ..............................................................153.<br />

Alexandra Barbosa, Christopher F. Florio, Chuan-Chin Chiao, and Roger T. Hanlon<br />

Visual Background Features That Elicit Mottled Body Patterns in Cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis ..............154.<br />

Leib Litman and Roger T. Hanlon<br />

The Time Course of the Camouflage Response of Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) ....................................154.<br />

Patrick Flight, Gabriele Gerlach, and Jelle Atema<br />

Sperm Load Impact on Female Courtship Behavior in the American Lobster (Homarus<br />

americanus) ............................................................................................................................................155.<br />

Robert C. Froemke and Dan Yang<br />

Transient NMDA Receptor Suppression Induces Long-Lasting Synaptic Depression ...........................155.<br />

Eric B. Gonzales and Glenn Dillon<br />

The Second Transmembrane Domain 7' Position Influences Channel Kinetics in the Glycine 1<br />

Receptor ..................................................................................................................................................156.<br />

A. Giuditta, M. Eyman, C. Cefaliello, E. Ferrara, B.B. Kaplan, Z. Scotto Lavina, and R. De Stefano<br />

Local Synthesis of Presynaptic RNA in Squid Optic Lobe Slices ...........................................................156.<br />

Haohua Qian, Richard L. Chappell, Stephen Re<strong>de</strong>nti, and Harris Ripps<br />

Membrane Properties of Two Subtypes of Skate Bipolar Cells ..............................................................157.<br />

Stephen Re<strong>de</strong>nti and Richard L. Chappell<br />

Zinc Transport in Vertebrate Retina ........................................................................................................158.<br />

Richard L. Chappell, Haohua Qian, Jane Zakevicius, and Harris Ripps<br />

Histidine Suppresses Zinc Modulation of Connexin Hemichannels Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes ....158.<br />

Andrew B. Scioletti, Alan M. Kuzirian, Herman T. Epstein, Thomas J. Nelson, and Daniel L. Alkon<br />

Memory Enhancement by Bryostatin in Hermissenda ............................................................................159.<br />

11


Cellular Biology:<br />

Lionel F. Jaffe<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ine Plants May Polarize Remote Fucus Eggs via Luminescence ....................................................160.<br />

John H. Henson, Jessica E. Davis, Charles B. Shuster, Christopher A. Fried, and Calvin R.<br />

Simerly<br />

Characterization of Anastral, Bipolar Spindle Development and Atypical Cytokinesis in Ammonia-<br />

Activated Sea Urchin Eggs .....................................................................................................................160.<br />

Christopher A. Fried, Michelle Reina, and John H. Henson<br />

Actin-Mediated Retrogra<strong>de</strong> Flow in Sea Urchin Coelomocytes: Conversion From a Lamellipodial-<br />

Dominated to a Filopodial-Dominated Form ...........................................................................................161.<br />

Yuki Kagawa, Timothy L. Megraw, and Rudolf Ol<strong>de</strong>nbourg<br />

Cell Division Dynamics of Drosophila Kc Cells Without Functional Mitotic Centrosomes ......................161.<br />

Clarissa A. Sabella, Ellen E. Faszewski, Jane C. Kaltenbach, William J. Kuhns, Max M. Burger,<br />

and Xavier Fernan<strong>de</strong>z-Busquets<br />

Immunocytochemical Detection of Integrins 3 and ß1 in Allografts of the <strong>Mar</strong>ine Sponge,<br />

Microciona prolifera .................................................................................................................................162.<br />

James Jiayuan Tong<br />

Mitochondrial Dynamics in Synaptic Plasticity in Drosophila melanogaster ...........................................162.<br />

Sung Min You, Clarissa Cheney, Agnieszka Swiatecka-Urban, and George M. Langford<br />

Role of Rab GTPases in Recruitment of Myosin- V to Vesicles of Squid Giant Axon ............................163.<br />

John Paul Flores, Y. L. Lee, and George M. Langford<br />

Isolation of the Myosin-V/Kinesin Heteromotor Complex by Sucrose Gradient Fractionation ...............163.<br />

Carl J. DeSelm, R. Lu, C. M. Cheney, and George M. Langford<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification of Novel Myosin-V Binding Partners by Immunoprecipitation and Column<br />

Chromatography .....................................................................................................................................164.<br />

Michael P. Conley, <strong>Mar</strong>cus K. Jang, Joseph A. DeGiorgis, and Elaine L. Bearer<br />

Anterogra<strong>de</strong> Transport of Pepti<strong>de</strong>-Conjugated Fluorescent Beads in the Squid Giant Axon<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntifies a Zip-Co<strong>de</strong> for the Synapse ....................................................................................................164.<br />

Developmental Biology:<br />

Omicron L. Ma, Sarah E. Webb, and Andrew L. Miller<br />

Imaging Patterns of Ca2+ Transients During the Blastula Period in Zebrafish Embryos .......................165.<br />

Andrew L. Miller, Catherine Leclerc, <strong>Mar</strong>c Moreau, and Sarah E. Webb<br />

Role of Ca2+ Signaling During Early Pronephric Development in Zebrafish and Xenopus Embryos ....165.<br />

Karen Crawford<br />

MAP Kinase Expression Correlates With the Posterior Midline in Early Cleavage Stage Squid<br />

Embryos ..................................................................................................................................................166.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k H. Shalinsky and James Leiter<br />

Gill and Lung Rhythm in the Late-Stage Tadpole Rana catesbeiana ....................................................166.<br />

Protein Chemistry, Molecular Biology, and Evolution:<br />

Adam Bissonnette and Steven Roberts<br />

Characterization of the Myostatin-Like Gene in Argopecten irradians ...................................................167.<br />

Rebecca Vitale and Joseph D. Buxbaum<br />

Use of the Split-Ubiquitin Two-Hybrid System to I<strong>de</strong>ntify Proteins Interacting With the Alzheimer<br />

Proteins APP and LRP ............................................................................................................................167.<br />

Robert M. Gould, Hilary Morrison, Robert Campbell, and Edwin Gilland<br />

Evolution of Myelin Proteins ....................................................................................................................168.<br />

Kristen M. Ettensohn, Peggy Biga, Christina Romano, Robert H. Devlin, and Steven B. Roberts<br />

Genes Differentially Expressed in Growth Hormone Transgenic Salmon ..............................................168.<br />

Daniel E. Gol<strong>de</strong>n and Stephen L. Hajduk<br />

Cis Editing in Trypanosoma brucei brucei as a Mo<strong>de</strong>l for Un<strong>de</strong>rstanding Gui<strong>de</strong>-RNA Structural<br />

and Functional Requirements .................................................................................................................169.<br />

Gillian E. Robbins, Gonzalo Giribet, Karin Kiontke, David H. Fitch, Jeffrey L. Boore, and Robert K.<br />

Campbell<br />

Initial Sequence and Protein Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Results of a Mitochondrial Genome Project on<br />

Un<strong>de</strong>rstudied Invertebrate Phyla ............................................................................................................169.<br />

Bioinformatics:<br />

12


David P. Remsen and D. J. Patterson<br />

Development of a Global Collaborative Taxonomic Name Service for the Location and Retrieval of<br />

Electronic Resources in Biology .............................................................................................................170.<br />

Microbiology, Pathology, and Immunology:<br />

Phoenix Becker, Roxanna Smolowitz, Morgan Porter, Andrea Hsu, and Steven Roberts<br />

Characterization of Bacteria Associated With Lobster Shell Disease ....................................................171.<br />

Shira Horenstein, Roxanna Smolowitz, Kevin Uhlinger, and Steven Roberts<br />

Diagnosis of Edwardsiella tarda Infection in Oyster Toadfish (Opsanus tau) Held at the <strong>Mar</strong>ine<br />

Resources Center ...................................................................................................................................171.<br />

Peter B. Armstrong, <strong>Mar</strong>garet T. Armstrong, Steven M. Theg, Nikolai Braun, Norman Wainwright,<br />

and R. L. Pardy<br />

Histochemical Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for Lipopolysacchari<strong>de</strong> (Endotoxin) in Eukaryotes ..........................................172.<br />

Peter A. Bosniak and Peter B. Armstrong<br />

Blood Clotting in Limulus Immunity: Physiological Impairment of Clot-Entrapped Bacteria ...................172.<br />

Ecology and Population Biology:<br />

Evan J. Fedorko, R. Gil Pontius, Jr., Stephen P. Aldrich, Luc Claessens, Charles Hopkinson, Jr.,<br />

and Wilfred M. Wollheim<br />

Spatial Distribution of Land Type in Regression Mo<strong>de</strong>ls of Pollutant Loading .......................................173.<br />

Kayla Halloran, Matt Charette, Paul Hen<strong>de</strong>rson, Kevin Kroeger, Lindsey Ryckman, John Crusius,<br />

and Dirk Koopmans<br />

Estimating Groundwater-Derived Nitrogen Flux Into a Coastal Embayment: Salt Pond, Cape Cod,<br />

Massachusetts ........................................................................................................................................173.<br />

Jenn Kerry, Dorothy Boorse, and Robert Buchsbaum<br />

Effect of Nutrient Enrichment and Salinity on Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Invertebrates in the Plum Island Estuary ......174.<br />

Allison C. Craney, S. T. Haley, and S. T. Dyhrman<br />

Alkaline Phosphatase Activity in the Toxic Dinoflagellate Karenia brevis ..............................................174.<br />

Leanna R. Heffner, Mirta Teichberg, Sophia Fox, and Ivan Valiela<br />

Nitrate Reductase and Glutamine Synthetase Activity and Growth in Ulva lactuca in Waquoit Bay:<br />

A Time Sequence of Responses to Differences in Nitrogen Supply ......................................................175.<br />

Sarah B. Cierpich, Sara P. Grady, and Ivan Valiela<br />

Life History Analysis of the Juvenile Horseshoe Crab in Pleasant Bay, Cape Cod ...............................175.<br />

BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 5, 2004.<br />

Annual versus perennial growth cycle Ruppia maritima L.: temporal variation in population<br />

characteristics in Mediterranean lagoon (monolimni and Drana Lagoons, Northern Aegean Sea)<br />

Paraskevi Malea, Theodoros Kevrekidis and Athanassios Mogias ........................................................ 357<br />

Giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera) survival in <strong>de</strong>ep water (25-40 m) during El Niño of 1997-1998 in<br />

Baja California, Mexico<br />

Lydia B. Ladah and Jose A. zercuche-Gonzalez ...................................................................................367<br />

Effects of temperature and salinity on growth, reproduction and survival in the introduced red alga<br />

Heterosiphonia japonica (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta)<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>it Ruge Bjaerke and jan Rueness .....................................................................................................373<br />

Morphology and vegetative reproduction of the introduced species Hypnea cornuted (Rhodophyta,<br />

Gigartinales)<br />

Ester Cecere, Antonella Petrocelli and <strong>Mar</strong>c Verlaque ......................................................................... 381<br />

Recent introduction of Polydiphonia morrowii (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) to Punta Arenas, Chile<br />

Myung-Sook Kim, Eun Chang Yang, Andres Mansilla and Sung Min Boo ..............................................389<br />

Effect of solar irradiance on lipids of the green alga Ulva fenestrate Postels et Ruprecht<br />

Svetlana V. Khotimchenko and Irina M. Yakovlena ................................................................................ 395<br />

Phenolic contents of two brown algae, Turbinaria ornata and Sargassum mangarevense on Tahiti<br />

(French Polynesia): interspecific, ontogenic and spatio-temporal variations<br />

Stiger, V., E. Deslan<strong>de</strong>s and C.E. Payri ..................................................................................................402<br />

Interspecific and temporal variation in phlorotannin levels in an assemblage of brown algae<br />

Connan, S., F. Goulard, V. Stiger, E. Deslan<strong>de</strong>s and E. Ar Gall ............................................................ 410<br />

New records of planktonic dinoflagellates (Dinophyceae) from the Mexican Pacific Ocean<br />

13


Hernán<strong>de</strong>z-Becerril, D.U. and E. Bravo-Sierra .................................................................................... 417<br />

Sargassum kendrickii (Fucales, Phaeophyceae), a new species of subgenus Phyllotrichia from<br />

southern Australia<br />

Goldberg, N.A., and J.M. Huisman ........................................................................................................ 424<br />

Aglaothamnion rigidulum nov. spec. (Rhodophyta, Ceramiaceae) from South Africa*<br />

De Clerck, O., J.J. Bolton, R.J. An<strong>de</strong>rson and E. Coppejans ................................................................. 431<br />

Meeting 437<br />

BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 6, 2004.<br />

Macroalgal assemblage structure on a coral reef in Nanwan Bay in southern Taiwan<br />

Tsai, C.-C., S.-L. Wong, J.-S. Chang, R.-L. Hwang, C.-F. Dai, Y.-C. Yu, Y.-T. Shyu, F.<br />

Sheu and T.-M. Lee ............................................................................................................................... 439<br />

The effect of thallus size, life stage, aggregation, wave exposure and substratum conditions on<br />

theforces required to break or dislodge the small kelp Ecklonia radiata<br />

Thomsen, M.S., T. Wernberg and G.A. Kendrick ................................................................................. 454<br />

Reproduction in the green macroalga Codium (Chlorophyta): characterization of gametes<br />

Prince, J.S. and C.D. Trowbridge ........................................................................................................... 461<br />

Vegetative and reproductive morphology of Sargassum orotavicum sp. nov. (Fucales,<br />

Phaeophyceae) from the Canary Islands (eastern Atlantic Ocean)*<br />

Díaz-Villa, T., J. Afonso-Carrillo and M. Sansón .................................................................................... 471<br />

Recognition of Spyridia griffithsiana comb. nov. (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta): a taxon previously<br />

misi<strong>de</strong>ntified as Spyridia filamentosa from Europe*<br />

Zuccarello, G.C., W.F. Prud’homme van Reine and H. Stegenga ......................................................... 481<br />

Crystalline forms and cross-sectional dimensions of cellulose microfibrils in the Flori<strong>de</strong>ophyceae<br />

(Rhodophyta)<br />

Newman, R.H. and T.C. Davidson ......................................................................................................... 490<br />

Geographic and host distribution of lignicolous mangrove microfungi<br />

Schmit, J.P. and C.A. Shearer .................................................................................................................496<br />

Acknowledgement ...................................................................................................................................504<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

Y. Takazawa, K. Kitamura, M. Yoshikane, Y. Shibata, M. Morita, Discovery of Fenthion Poisoning<br />

in Two Japanese Cranes ( Grus japonensis) Found Dead in Hokkaido, Japan, ........................... 947 - 954<br />

R. E. Jung, W. H. Karasov, M. J. Melancon, Cytochrome P450 Activity in Green Frogs ( Rana<br />

clamitans melanota) Exposed to Water and Sediments in the Fox River and Green Bay,<br />

Wisconsin, USA, ............................................................................................................................ 955 - 962<br />

S. B. Ab<strong>de</strong>l-Ghani, E. <strong>Mar</strong>tinez-Lopez, Y. Pérez-Pertejo, A. E. Bayoumi, A. Garcia-Fernan<strong>de</strong>z, R.<br />

Balaña-Fouce, D. Ordóñez, Cytotoxicity and Mutagenicity of Four Insect Pheromones in CHO-K1<br />

Cells, .............................................................................................................................................. 963 - 970<br />

M. B. M. Ibrahim, H. A. Gamila, Algal Bioassay for Evaluating the Role of Algae in Bioremediation<br />

of Cru<strong>de</strong> Oil: II. Freshwater Phytoplankton Assemblages, ............................................................ 971 - 978<br />

J. R. Xia, Y. J. Li, J. Lu, B. Chen, Effects of Copper and Cadmium on Growth, Photosynthesis,<br />

and Pigment Content in Gracilaria lemaneiformis, ........................................................................ 979 - 986<br />

K. Stook, B. Dubey, M. Ward, T. Townsend, G. Bitton, H. Solo-Gabriele, Heavy Metal Toxicity of<br />

Pressure Treated Wood Leachates with MetPLATE TM, ......................................... 987 - 994<br />

Y. Kamaya, T. Takada, K. Suzuki, Effect of Medium Phosphate Levels on the Sensitivity of<br />

Selenastrum capricornutum to Chemicals, , ............................................................................................995<br />

S. A. Jusu, F. X. Kong, B. Q. Qing, J. K. Tan, X. B. Han, Time Course Biochemical Responses of<br />

Green Algae Scene<strong>de</strong>smus obliquus to Aluminum and Low pH, .............................................. 1001 - 1008<br />

T. V. Beaty, A. C. Hendricks, Effects of Culture Methods on Survival, Weight, and Development of<br />

Chironomus riparius Meigen, ..................................................................................................... 1009 - 1016<br />

S. X. Liu, C. L. Sun, S. R. Zhang, Photocatalytic Regeneration of Exhausted Activated Carbon<br />

Saturated with Phenol, ............................................................................................................... 1017 - 1024<br />

14


M. T. Begonia, G. B. Begonia, G. Miller, D. Gilliard, C. Young, Phosphatase Activity and<br />

Populations of Microorganisms from Cadmium- and Lead-Contaminated Soils, ...................... 1025 - 1032<br />

M. T. Begonia, G. B. Begonia, G. S. Miller, D. Gilliard, Effects of Chelate Application Time on the<br />

Phytoextraction of Lead-Contaminated Soils, ............................................................................ 1033 - 1040<br />

I. R. Phillips, D. T. Lamb, D. W. Hawker, E. D. Burton, Effects of pH and Salinity on Copper, Lead,<br />

and Zinc Sorption Rates in Sediments from Moreton Bay, Australia, ........................................ 1041 - 1048<br />

C. Espinoza, A. Camaño, R. Díaz, Spatial and Temporal Comparison of Copper Bioaccumulation<br />

in the Mussel Aulacomya ater (Molina) from Jorgillo Location (23°45’S; 79°27’W) and Dichato<br />

Location (36°32’S; 71°56’W), Chile, .......................................................................................... 1049 - 1056<br />

R. B. Voegborlo, D. A. Baah, E. E. Kwaansa-Ansah, A. A. Adimado, J. H. Ephraim, Mercury<br />

Concentrations in Fish Species from the Gulf of Guinea, Ghana, ............................................. 1057 - 1064<br />

K. Liber, S. Stoughton, A. Rosaasen, Chronic Uranium Toxicity to White Sucker Fry ( Catostomus<br />

commersoni), ............................................................................................................................. 1065 - 1071<br />

A. D. Pereira Netto, I. F. Cunha, T. M. Krauss, Persistence of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in<br />

the Soil of a Burned Area for Agricultural Purposes in Brazil, ................................................... 1072 - 1077<br />

J. K. Muller, K. G. Johnson, M. S. Sepúlveda, C. J. Borgert, T. S. Gross, Accumulation of Dietary<br />

DDE and Dieldrin by Largemouth Bass, Micropterus salmoi<strong>de</strong>s floridanus, ............................. 1078 - 1085<br />

G. F. Antonious, Persistence of 2-Tri<strong>de</strong>canone on the Leaves of Seven Vegetables, .............. 1086 - 1093<br />

S. Suhaimi, N. M. Tahir, S. Suriyati, Dissolved Nutrients and Chlorophyll a Status of the Setiu<br />

River, Terengganu, Malaysia, .................................................................................................... 1094 - 1100<br />

Y. Takazawa, K. Kitamura, M. Yoshikane, Y. Shibata, M. Morita, F. Sugimori, Comparison of<br />

Organochlorine Compounds Among Fat, Muscles, and Livers of Pintails ( Anas acuta) from Lake<br />

Hyoko, Japan, ............................................................................................................................ 1101 - 1108<br />

X. Jin, G. Huang, G. Jiang, Q. Zhou, J. Liu, Distribution of 4-Nonylphenol Isomers in Surface<br />

Water of the Haihe River, People’s Republic of China, ............................................................ 1109 – 1116<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 75, No. 3, November 2004.<br />

Age, Growth, and Reproduction of the Red Snapper, Lutjanus campechanus, from the Atlantic<br />

Waters of the Southeastern U. S. ...............................................................................................335-360(26)<br />

Authors: D. Byron White; Sandra M. Palmer<br />

Feeding Ecology of Lanternfish (Pisces: Myctophidae) Larvae: Prey Preferences as a Reflection<br />

of Morphology..............................................................................................................................361-379(19)<br />

Authors: Walter J. Conley; Thomas L. Hopkins<br />

Systematics of Pelagic Aeolid Nudibranchs Of The Family Glaucidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda). 381-389(9)<br />

Authors: Ágel Valdés; Orso Angulo Campillo<br />

Dynamics of Dissolved Organic Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus in a Seagrass Meadow of<br />

Laguna Madre, Texas..................................................................................................................391-407(17)<br />

Authors: Susan Ziegler; Edith Kaiser; Ronald Benner<br />

A New Species of Cyamid (Crustacea: Amphipoda) From A Stran<strong>de</strong>d Cetacean in Southern<br />

Bahia, Brazil................................................................................................................................ 409-421(13)<br />

Authors: T.A. Haney; A.O. De Almeida; M.S.S. Reis<br />

Timing of Skeletal Band Formation In Montastraea Annularis: Relationship to Environmental and<br />

Endogenous Factors................................................................................................................... 423-437(15)<br />

Author: Judith Men<strong>de</strong>s<br />

Nocturnal Vertical Distribution of Late-stage Larval Coral Reef Fishes Off the Leeward Si<strong>de</strong> of<br />

Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia................................................................................ 439-451(13)<br />

Author: Rebecca Fisher<br />

Coral Community Structure and Dynamics in the Huatulco Area, Western Mexico...................453-472(20)<br />

Authors: Ramón Andrés López Pérez; Luz <strong>Mar</strong>ía Hernán<strong>de</strong>z Ballesteros<br />

Spatial, Ontogenetic, and Temporal Variation in the Feeding Habits of the Squirrelfish<br />

Sargocentron Microstoma on Reefs in Moorea, French Polynesia...............................................473-480(8)<br />

Authors: Jesús Ernesto Arias-González; René Galzin; Mireille Harmelin-Vivien<br />

New Records of Elasmobranchs from the Cayman Trench, Jamaica..........................................481-485(5)<br />

Authors: Donna M. Mclaughlin; John F. Morrissey<br />

15


Persistence of the Sponge Suberites Aurantiaca (duchassaing and Michelotti, 1864) in an<br />

Estuarine Ecosystem (pacific Coast, Mexico)..............................................................................487-497(11)<br />

Authors: José Luis Carballo; Benjamín Yáñez; Héctor Nava<br />

Changing Sea Levels: Effects of Ti<strong>de</strong>s, Weather and Climate.....................................................499-500(2)<br />

Author: Amy Clement<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 4, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

Transport of benthic diatoms across the continental shelf off southern Baja California Peninsula.<br />

Transporte <strong>de</strong> diatomeas bentónicas sobre la plataforma continental en frente <strong>de</strong> la parte sur <strong>de</strong><br />

la Península <strong>de</strong> Baja California.<br />

A. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez-López, D.A. Siqueiros-Beltrones y N. Silverbergs.........................................................503-513<br />

Respuesta <strong>de</strong> los poliquetos bentónicos a la variabilidad ambiental y condiciones El Niño en<br />

Bahía Petacalco (Guerrero, México).<br />

Response of benthic polychaetes to environmental variability and El Niño conditions at Petacalco<br />

Bay (Guerrero, Mexico).<br />

J.A. Rodríguez-Valencia....................................................................................................................515-526<br />

Niveles plasmáticos <strong>de</strong> hormona luteinizante en machos <strong>de</strong> lubina (Dicentrarchus labrax L.)<br />

alimentados con dietas con distinta composición en ácidos grasos.<br />

Luteinizing hormone plasma levels in male European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) feeding<br />

diets with different fatty acid composition.<br />

José <strong>Mar</strong>ía Navas, Evaristo Mañanós, Jesús Ramos, Silvia Zanuy y Manuel Carrillo................... 527–536<br />

Susceptibilidad <strong>de</strong> Litopenaeus schmitti y Cherax quadricarinatus al virus <strong>de</strong>l síndrome <strong>de</strong> la<br />

mancha blanca (WSSV).<br />

Susceptibility of Litopenaeus schmitti and Cherax quadricarinatus to white spot syndrome virus<br />

(WSSV).<br />

M.L. Unzueta-Bustamante, R. Silveira-Cofficny, A.A. Prieto, G. Aguirre-Guzmán y R. Vázquez-<br />

Juárez. ............................................................................................................................................. 537–545<br />

Comparación entre el uso <strong>de</strong> dos <strong>de</strong>rechos <strong>de</strong> acceso pesquero, concesiones y permisos, en la<br />

pesquería <strong>de</strong> erizo rojo <strong>de</strong> mar, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus (Agassiz), en Santo Tomás, Baja<br />

California, México.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the use of two fishery access rights, concessions and licences, in the red sea urchin,<br />

Strongylocentrotus franciscanus (Agassiz), fishery at Santo Tomás, Baja California, Mexico.<br />

Evlin Ramírez-Félix y Héctor G. Manzo-Monroy............................................................................. 547–560<br />

Assessment of the Pacific red snapper (Lutjanus peru) fishery in the southwestern Gulf of<br />

California.<br />

Evaluación <strong>de</strong> la pesquería <strong>de</strong>l huachinango (Lutjanus peru) en el suroeste <strong>de</strong>l Golfo <strong>de</strong><br />

California.<br />

J. Gabriel Díaz-Uribe, Ernesto A. Chávez y Juan F. Elorduy-Garay................................................561–574<br />

Morfodinámica <strong>de</strong> una playa mesomareal expuesta con terraza <strong>de</strong> bajamar (Faro, Sur <strong>de</strong><br />

Portugal).<br />

Morphodynamics of a mesotidal, exposed, low ti<strong>de</strong> terrace beach (Faro, southern Portugal).<br />

G. Anfuso y N. Ruiz ......................................................................................................................... 575–584<br />

Fases geoquímicas <strong>de</strong>l Fe y grado <strong>de</strong> piritización en sedimentos <strong>de</strong> la Ría <strong>de</strong> Pontevedra (NO <strong>de</strong><br />

España): Implicaciones <strong>de</strong>l cultivo <strong>de</strong>l mejillón en bateas.<br />

Geochemical phases of Fe and <strong>de</strong>gree of pyritization in sediments from Ría <strong>de</strong> Pontevedra (NW<br />

Spain): Implications of mussel raft culture.<br />

I. León, G. Mén<strong>de</strong>z y B. Rubio..........................................................................................................585–602<br />

Calibración <strong>de</strong> los paleotermómetros <strong>de</strong> Sr/Ca y Mg/Ca en el coral Porites sp. <strong>de</strong> Isla San<br />

Benedicto, Archipiélago Revillagigedo, México.<br />

Calibration of Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca paleothermometers in coral Porites sp. from San Benedicto<br />

Island, Revillagigedo Archipelago, Mexico.<br />

J.A. Villaescusa y J.D. Carriquiry......................................................................................................603–618<br />

16


Hábitos <strong>de</strong> alimentación <strong>de</strong>l lenguado Paralichtys orbignyanus (Valenciennes, 1842) en una<br />

laguna costera somera <strong>de</strong>l Atlántico Sur: Rocha, Uruguay.<br />

Feeding habits of the floun<strong>de</strong>r Paralichthys orbignyanus (Valenciennes, 1842) in a shallow coastal<br />

lagoon of the southern Atlantic Ocean: Rocha, Uruguay.<br />

Walter Norbis y Oscar Galli...............................................................................................................619–625<br />

Microflora <strong>de</strong> la sardina (Sardina pilchardus) fresca y refrigerada <strong>de</strong> la costa Atlántica marroquí.<br />

Microflora of fresh and ice-stored sardines (Sardina pilchardus) from the Moroccan Atlantic coast.<br />

Fatima Elotmani, Omar Assobhei, Anne-<strong>Mar</strong>ie Revol-Junelles y Jean-Bernard Millière.................619–625<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 18, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

Conservation Biology in the Pacific ........................................................................................................1449<br />

Letters ICO Approaches to Tropical Forest Conservation......................................................................1452<br />

Steven V. Price, Steffen Reichle<br />

Letters: 2.................................................................................................................................................1452<br />

Richard E. Rice, Eduard T. Niesten<br />

Letters: 3.................................................................................................................................................1454<br />

Claudia Romero, Germán I. Andra<strong>de</strong><br />

Editor's Acknowledgments......................................................................................................................1456<br />

Orr's Laws...............................................................................................................................................1457<br />

David W. Orr<br />

Deflating the Ecological Bubble..............................................................................................................1461<br />

Denis Hayes<br />

Abandon Environmentalism for the Sake of the Revolution...................................................................1463<br />

Bill Vitek<br />

Dreaming the Impossible........................................................................................................................1465<br />

Thomas E. Lovejoy<br />

Un<strong>de</strong>rstanding the Causes of Disease in European Freshwater Crayfish.............................................1466<br />

BRETT F. EDGERTON, PAULA HENTTONEN, JAPO JUSSILA, ARI MANNONEN, PIETARI<br />

PAASONEN, TROND TAUGBØL, LENNART EDSMAN, CATHERINE SOUTY-GROSSET<br />

Ecosystem Management across Ownerships: the Potential for Collision with Antitrust Laws...............1475<br />

JONATHAN R. THOMPSON, MARK D. ANDERSON, K. NORMAN JOHNSON<br />

When Good Animals Love Bad Habitats: Ecological Traps and the Conservation of Animal<br />

Populations.............................................................................................................................................1482<br />

JAMES BATTIN<br />

Volunteers in <strong>Mar</strong>ine Conservation Monitoring: a Study of the Distribution of Seahorses Carried<br />

Out in Collaboration with Recreational Scuba Divers.............................................................................1492<br />

STEFANO GOFFREDO, CORRADO PICCINETTI, FRANCESCO ZACCANTI<br />

Potential Ecological Distribution of Alien Invasive Species and Risk Assessment: a Case Study of<br />

Buffel Grass in Arid Regions of Mexico..................................................................................................1504<br />

LAURA ARRIAGA, ALEJANDRO E. CASTELLANOS V., ELIZABETH MORENO, JESÚS<br />

ALARCÓN<br />

Implications of Clonal Structure for Effective Population Size and Genetic Drift in a Rare<br />

Terrestrial Orchid, Cremastra appendiculata..........................................................................................1515<br />

MI YOON CHUNG, JOHN D. NASON, MYONG GI CHUNG<br />

Influence of Temporal Scale of Sampling on Detection of Relationships between Invasive Plants<br />

and the Diversity Patterns of Plants and Butterflies................................................................................1525<br />

RALPH MAC NALLY, ERICA FLEISHMAN, DENNIS D. MURPHY<br />

Response of Savanna Fire Regimes to Changing Fire-Management Policies in a Large African<br />

National Park...........................................................................................................................................1533<br />

B.W. VAN WILGEN, N. GOVENDER, H.C. BIGGS, D. NTSALA, X.N. FUNDA<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Prescribed Surface-Fire Regimes for Pinus strobus Conservation ........................................1541<br />

JENNIFER L. BEVERLY, DAVID L. MARTELL<br />

Conservation Threat of Increasing Fire Frequencies in the Western Ghats, India.................................1553<br />

NARENDRAN KODANDAPANI, MARK A. COCHRANE, R. SUKUMAR<br />

17


Changes in Forest Use Value through Ecological Succession and Their Implications for Land<br />

Management in the Peruvian Amazon....................................................................................................1562<br />

MICHAEL C. GAVIN<br />

Ecological Correlates of Extinction Proneness in Tropical Butterflies....................................................1571<br />

LIAN PIN KOH, NAVJOT S. SODHI, BARRY W. BROOK<br />

Catastrophic Decline in Mollusc Diversity in Eastern Tasmania and Its Concurrence with Shellfish<br />

Fisheries..................................................................................................................................................1579<br />

G.J. EDGAR, C.R. SAMSON<br />

The Role of Hybrid Vigor in the Replacement of Pecos Pupfish by Its Hybrids with Sheepshead<br />

Minnow....................................................................................................................................................1589<br />

JONATHAN A. ROSENFIELD, STACY NOLASCO, STEVEN LINDAUER, CLAUDETTE<br />

SANDOVAL, ASTRID KODRIC-BROWN<br />

A Concentric Analysis of the Impact of Urbanization on the Threatened European Tree Frog in an<br />

Agricultural Landscape ...........................................................................................................................1599<br />

JÉRÔME PELLET, ANTOINE GUISAN, NICOLAS PERRIN<br />

Bird Species' Tolerance of Secondary Forest Habitats and Its Effects on Extinction ............................1607<br />

GRANT M. HARRIS, STUART L. PIMM<br />

Linkage of Conservation Activity to Trends in the U.S. Economy..........................................................1617<br />

OLIVER R. W. PERGAMS, BRIAN CZECH, J. CHRISTOPHER HANEY, DENNIS NYBERG<br />

Correlations among Extinction Risks Assessed by Different Systems of Threatened Species<br />

Categorization.........................................................................................................................................1624<br />

JULIAN J. O'GRADY, MARK A. BURGMAN, DAVID A. KEITH, LAWRENCE L. MASTER, SANDY<br />

J. ANDELMAN, BARRY W. BROOK, GEOFFREY A. HAMMERSON, TRACEY REGAN,<br />

RICHARD FRANKHAM<br />

From Red Lists to Species of Conservation Concern.............................................................................1636<br />

VERENA KELLER, KURT BOLLMANN<br />

Damage to Cauliflower Coral by Monofilament Fishing Lines in Hawaii................................................1645<br />

KAZUE ASOH, TOMOKO YOSHIKAWA, RANDALL KOSAKI, ELIZABETH A. MARSCHALL<br />

Effects of Road Fencing on Population Persistence ..............................................................................1651<br />

JOCHEN A. G. JAEGER, LENORE FAHRIG<br />

Edge Effects and Isolation: Red-Backed Voles Revisited......................................................................1658<br />

DAVID A. TALLMON, L. SCOTT MILLS<br />

Relative Contributions of Sampling Error in Initial Population Size and Vital Rates to Outcomes of<br />

Population Viability Analysis...................................................................................................................1665<br />

PHILIP D. McLOUGHLIN, FRANÇOIS MESSIER<br />

The Sum Is Greater than the Parts.........................................................................................................1670<br />

JENNIFER MOLNAR, MICHELLE MARVIER, PETER KAREIVA<br />

Beyond Noah: Saving Species Is Not Enough.......................................................................................1672<br />

JONATHAN V. HIGGINS, TAYLOR H. RICKETTS, JEFFREY D. PARRISH, ERIC DINERSTEIN,<br />

GEORGE POWELL, SUZANNE PALMINTERI, JONATHAN M. HOEKSTRA, JOHN MORRISON,<br />

ADAM TOMASEK, JONATHAN ADAMS<br />

Nature Conservation Requires More than a Passion for Species..........................................................1674<br />

RICHARD M. COWLING, ANDREW T. KNIGHT, DANIEL P. FAITH, SIMON FERRIER, AMANDA<br />

T. LOMBARD, AMANDA DRIVER, MATHIEU ROUGET, KRISTAL MAZE, PHILIP G. DESMET<br />

Conservation Planning and Biodiversity: Assembling the Best Data for the Job ...................................1677<br />

R. L. PRESSEY<br />

Species, Data, and Conservation Planning............................................................................................1682<br />

THOMAS BROOKS, GUSTAVO A. B. da FONSECA, ANA S. L. RODRIGUES<br />

Do Alien Plants Reduce Insect Biomass? .............................................................................................1689<br />

DOUGLAS W. TALLAMY<br />

Deforesting the Earth: from Prehistory to Global Crisis..........................................................................1693<br />

Donald J. Leopold<br />

The Book of Hope...................................................................................................................................1694<br />

Thomas L. Fleischner<br />

Owl Update.............................................................................................................................................1696<br />

Jeff N. Davis<br />

18


An Avian Success Story..........................................................................................................................1697<br />

Charles J. Henny<br />

Biological Conveyor Belts.......................................................................................................................1699<br />

Anthony Ricciardi<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 11, November 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 />

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 />

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 />

19


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 />

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 />

Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />

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

Northern Hemisphere Snow Cover A2.2<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 77, Part. 7, July 2004.<br />

Retromysis nura new genus and species (Mysidacea, Mysidae, Heteromysini) from a superficial<br />

marine cave in Minorca (Balearic Islands, Mediterranean Sea)<br />

K. Wittmann ..............................................................................................................................................769<br />

Larval stages of the blue swimmer crab, Portunus pelagicus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Decapoda,<br />

Brachyura)<br />

J. Josileen & N. Menon ............................................................................................................................785<br />

Effets <strong>de</strong> la salinité et <strong>de</strong> la température sur la croissance et la reproduction <strong>de</strong> Moina salina<br />

Daday, 1888 (Branchiopoda, Moinidae) [The effects of salinity and temperature on the growth and<br />

reproduction of Moina salina Daday, 1888 (Branchiopoda, Moinidae)]<br />

A. Rokneddine .........................................................................................................................................805<br />

On a new species of Gammarus (Amphipoda, Gammaridae) from Zuanyankong cave, Guizhou,<br />

China<br />

Z. Hou, P. Li & S. Li .................................................................................................................................825<br />

Fine structure of the haemocytes of the Indian white shrimp, Fenneropenaeus indicus (H. Milne<br />

Edwards, 1837)<br />

P. Laxmilatha & A. Laxminarayana ..........................................................................................................835<br />

A new species of Longiflagrum (Tanaidacea, Parapseudidae), from Songkhla Lagoon, Thailand<br />

S. Angsupanich ........................................................................................................................................849<br />

The taxonomic status of the introduced North American signal crayfish, Pacifastacus leniusculus<br />

(Dana, 1852) in Japan, and the source of specimens in the newly reported population in<br />

Fukushima Prefecture<br />

T. Kawai, T. Mitamura & A. Ohtaka .........................................................................................................861<br />

New records of large branchiopods (Branchiopoda, Anostraca, Notostraca, and Spinicaudata)<br />

from Extremadura (southwestern Iberian Peninsula)<br />

J. Pérez-Bote ...........................................................................................................................................871<br />

Notes and News........................................................................................................................................879<br />

The barnacle, Xenobalanus globicipitis (Cirripedia, Coronulidae), attached to the bottle-nosed<br />

dolphin, Tursiops truncatus (Mammalia, Cetacea) on the southeastern coast of India<br />

S. Karuppiah, A. Subramanian & J. Obbard ............................................................................................879<br />

Scanning EM diagnosis of marine Decapoda larvae: a comparison of preparation techniques<br />

R. Meyer & R. Melzer ...............................................................................................................................883<br />

New records of Mysidopsis tortonesei Băcescu, 1968 and M. rionegrensis Hoffmeyer, 1993<br />

(Mysidacea) from the Río <strong>de</strong> la Plata estuary and Buenos Aires coastal waters<br />

20


A. Schiariti, H. Mianzan & F. Ramírez .....................................................................................................887<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vo. 77, Part. 8, August 2004.<br />

Chemosensory behaviour in the mud crab, Rhithropanopeus harrisii tri<strong>de</strong>ntatus from <strong>Mar</strong>twa Wisla<br />

Estuary (Gdansk Bay, Baltic Sea)<br />

A. Kidawa, M. <strong>Mar</strong>kowska & S. Rakusa-Suszczewski ............................................................................897<br />

The effect of low flow and stream drying on the distribution and relative abundance of the alien<br />

amphipod, Echinogammarus berilloni (Catta, 1878) in a karstic stream system (Westphalia,<br />

Germany)<br />

A. Meyer, N. Kaschek & E. Meyer ...........................................................................................................909<br />

Influence <strong>de</strong> la salinité et <strong>de</strong> la température sur la reproduction d'Arctodiaptomus salinus (Daday,<br />

1885) (Copepoda, Calanoida), du marais temporaire salé, ``La Sebkha Zima'' (<strong>Mar</strong>oc) [The<br />

influence of salinity and temperature on the reproduction of Arctodiaptomus salinus (Daday, 1885)<br />

(Copepoda, Calanoida) in the temporary salt marsh, ``La Sebkha Zima'' (Morocco)]<br />

A. Rokneddine .........................................................................................................................................923<br />

The vertical migration behaviour of two calanoid copepods, Acartia tonsa Dana, 1849 and<br />

Paracalanus parvus (Claus, 1863) in a stratified tropical bay in Brazil<br />

C. Gomes, A. <strong>Mar</strong>azzo & J. Valentin .......................................................................................................941<br />

Copepod assemblages and diel vertical migration in the East China Sea, north of Taiwan<br />

W. Lo, C. Shih & J. Hwang ......................................................................................................................955<br />

Population growth of Daphnia pulex (Cladocera) on a mixed diet (Microcystis aeruginosa with<br />

Chlorella or Scene<strong>de</strong>smus)<br />

A. Alva-<strong>Mar</strong>tınez, S. Sarma & S. Nandini ................................................................................................973<br />

Lethal effects of ultraviolet radiation un<strong>de</strong>r different concentrations of dissolved organic carbon on<br />

Neobosmina chilensis (Daday, 1902) (Cladocera, Bosminidae)<br />

P. De los Ríos ..........................................................................................................................................989<br />

Xantho poressa (Olivi, 1792) and Xantho pilipes A. Milne-Edwards, 1867 larvae (Brachyura,<br />

Xanthidae): scanning EM diagnosis of zoea I from the Adriatic Sea<br />

R. Meyer, S. Friedrich & R. Melzer ..........................................................................................................997<br />

Expanding the known distribution of Chirocephalus kerkyrensis Pesta, 1936 (Branchiopoda,<br />

Anostraca) in Italy<br />

G. Mura & G. Belmonte ..........................................................................................................................1007<br />

Notes and News......................................................................................................................................1013<br />

A new species of corophiid for the Turkish fauna: Chelicorophium maeoticum (Sowinsky, 1898)<br />

(Amphipoda)<br />

M. Özbek, M. Ustaoglu & S. Balik ..........................................................................................................1013<br />

A note on the priority of Rumphius' observation of Decapod Crustacea living in Nepenthes<br />

E. Beekman ............................................................................................................................................1019<br />

[Review of] B. A. <strong>Mar</strong>shall & B. Richer <strong>de</strong> Forges (eds.), 2004. Tropical <strong>de</strong>ep sea benthos<br />

L. Holthuis ..............................................................................................................................................1023<br />

[Review of] H. Schmalfuss & K. Wolf-Schwenninger, 2002. A bibliography of terrestrial isopods<br />

(Crustacea: Isopoda: Onisci<strong>de</strong>a). H. Schmalfuss, 2003. World catalog of terrestrial isopods<br />

(Isopoda: Onisci<strong>de</strong>a)<br />

L. Holthuis ..............................................................................................................................................1024<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 3, February 2005.<br />

Aquatic microcosm assessment of the effects of tylosin on Lemna gibba and Myriophyllum<br />

spicatum ...........................................................................................................................................389-401<br />

Richard A. Brain, Ketut (Jim) Bestari, Hans San<strong>de</strong>rson, <strong>Mar</strong>k L. Hanson, Christian J. Wilson,<br />

David J. Johnson, Paul K. Sibley and Keith R. Solomon<br />

Monitoring and mo<strong>de</strong>lling of biosphere/atmosphere exchange of gases and aerosols in Europe...403-413<br />

Jan Willem Erisman, Alex Vermeulen, Arjan Hensen, Chris Flechard, Ulrich Dämmgen, David<br />

Fowler, <strong>Mar</strong>k Sutton, Ludger Grünhage and Juha-Pekka Tuovinen<br />

Concentrations and compositions of organochlorine contaminants in sediments, soils,<br />

crustaceans, fishes and birds collected from Lake Tai, Hangzhou Bay and Shanghai city region,<br />

China .................................................................................................................................................415-429<br />

21


Haruhiko Nakata, Yuko Hirakawa, Masahiro Kawazoe, Tetsuji Nakabo, Koji Arizono, Shin-Ichi<br />

Abe, Takeshi Kitano, Hi<strong>de</strong>aki Shimada, Izumi Watanabe, Weihua Li and Xucheng Ding<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the fate of sulphur-35 in crops. 1. Calibration data ........................................................431-437<br />

Chris Collins and Nathan Cunningham<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the fate of sulphur-35 in crops. 2. Development and validation of the CROPS-35 mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />

.......................................................................................................................................................... 439-445<br />

Chris Collins and Nathan Cunningham<br />

Intrinsic and induced isoproturon catabolic activity in dissimilar soils and soils un<strong>de</strong>r dissimilar land<br />

use • ................................................................................................................................................ 447-454<br />

Brian J. Reid, Niki D. Papanikolaou and Ronah K. Wilcox<br />

The effects of perennial ryegrass and alfalfa on microbial abundance and diversity in petroleum<br />

contaminated soil • .......................................................................................................................... 455-465<br />

Jennifer L. Kirk, John N. Klironomos, Hung Lee and Jack T. Trevors<br />

Quantifying the role of forest soil and bedrock in the acid neutralization of surface water in steep<br />

hillslopes • ....................................................................................................................................... 467-480<br />

Yuko Asano and Taro Uchida<br />

Mercury bur<strong>de</strong>ns in Chinese mitten crabs (Eriocheir sinensis) in three tributaries of southern San<br />

Francisco Bay, California, USA • .................................................................................................... 481-487<br />

Clifford A. Hui, Deborah Rudnick and Erin Williams<br />

Accumulation of butyl- and phenyltin compounds in starfish and bivalves from the coastal<br />

environment of Korea • ................................................................................................................... 489-499<br />

Won Joon Shim, Un Hyuk Yim, Nam Sook Kim, Sang Hee Hong, Jae Ryoung Oh, Joong Kyun<br />

Jeon and Hi<strong>de</strong>o Okamura<br />

Brominated flame retardants in Alburnus alburnus from Cinca River Basin (Spain) • .................... 501-508<br />

Ethel Eljarrat, Agustina <strong>de</strong> la Cal, Demetrio Raldua, Concha Duran and Damia Barcelo<br />

Temporal trends of organochlorine contamination in Black Guillemots in Iceland from 1976 to<br />

1996 • .............................................................................................................................................. 509-515<br />

Kristín Ólafsdóttir, Ævar Petersen, Elín V. Magnúsdóttir, Thorvaldur Björnsson and Torkell<br />

Jóhannesson<br />

presence of humic acids • ............................................................................................................... 517-529<br />

Helena Prosen and Lucija Zupančič-Kralj<br />

Differential swimming performance of two natricine snakes exposed to a cholinesterase-inhibiting<br />

pestici<strong>de</strong> • ........................................................................................................................................ 531-540<br />

W.A. Hopkins, C.T. Winne and S.E. DuRant<br />

Clonal variation in heavy metal accumulation and biomass production in a poplar coppice culture.<br />

II. Vertical distribution and phytoextraction potential • .................................................................... 541-551<br />

I. Laureysens, L. De Temmerman, T. Hastir, M. Van Gysel and R. Ceulemans<br />

Physiological and foliar symptom response in the crowns of Prunus serotina, Fraxinus americana<br />

and Acer rubrum canopy trees to ambient ozone un<strong>de</strong>r forest conditions • ................................... 553-567<br />

M. Schaub, J.M. Skelly, J.W. Zhang, J.A. Ferdinand, J.E. Savage, R.E. Stevenson, D.D. Davis<br />

and K.C. Steiner<br />

Stochastic analysis to assess the spatial distribution of groundwater nitrate concentrations in the<br />

Po catchment (Italy) • ...................................................................................................................... 569-580<br />

Sergio Cinnirella, Gabriele Buttafuoco and Nicola Pirrone<br />

Absorption of <strong>de</strong>cabromodiphenyl ether and other organohalogen chemicals by grey seals<br />

(Halichoerus grypus) • ..................................................................................................................... 581-586<br />

Gareth O. Thomas, Simon E.W. Moss, Lillemor Asplund and Ailsa J. Hall<br />

Spray irrigation of landfill leachate: estimating potential exposures to workers and bystan<strong>de</strong>rs<br />

using a modified air box mo<strong>de</strong>l and generalised source term • ...................................................... 587-599<br />

Duncan Gray, Simon J.T. Pollard, Lynn Spence, Richard Smith and Jan R. Gronow<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION<br />

Vol. 134, No. 1, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />

Quantifying ozone uptake and its effects on the stand level of common beech (Fagus sylvatica L.)<br />

in Southern ................................................................................................................................................1-4<br />

Christoph Dittmar, Klaus Pfaffelmoser, Thomas Rötzer and Wolfram Elling<br />

Validated sampling strategy for assessing contaminants in soil stockpiles • ....................................... 5-11<br />

Frank Lamé, Ton Hon<strong>de</strong>rs, Giljam Derksen and Michiel Ga<strong>de</strong>lla<br />

22


Mercury transfer from fish carcasses to scavengers in boreal lakes: the use of stable isotopes of<br />

mercury • ............................................................................................................................................. 13-22<br />

José Sarica, <strong>Mar</strong>c Amyot, Landis Hare, Paul Blanchfield, R.A. (Drew) Bodaly, Holger Hintelmann<br />

and <strong>Mar</strong>c Lucotte<br />

Study of calcium-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt lead-tolerance on plants differing in their level of Ca-<strong>de</strong>ficiency<br />

tolerance • ........................................................................................................................................... 23-34<br />

Danuta <strong>Mar</strong>ia Antosiewicz<br />

Sorption studies of chloroanilines on kaolinite and montmorillonite • ................................................. 35-43<br />

S. Angioi, S. Polati, M. Roz, C. Rinaudo, V. Gianotti and M.C. Gennaro<br />

Bioaccumulation of 51Cr, 63Ni and 14C in Baltic Sea benthos • ....................................................... 45-56<br />

L. Kumblad, C. Bradshaw and M. Gilek<br />

Do tubificid worms influence the fate of organic matter and pollutants in stormwater sediments? • .. 57-69<br />

F. Mermillod-Blondin, G. Nogaro, T. Datry, F. Malard and J. Gibert<br />

Release behavior of triazine residues in stabilised contaminated soils • ........................................... 71-77<br />

G.G. Ying, R.S. Kookana and M. Mallavarpu<br />

Mercury contamination in human hair and fish from Cambodia: levels, specific accumulation and<br />

risk assessment • ................................................................................................................................ 79-86<br />

Tetsuro Agusa, Takashi Kunito, Hisato Iwata, In Monirith, Touch Seang Tana, Annamalai<br />

Subramanian and Shinsuke Tanabe<br />

Impact of a flood disaster on sediment toxicity in a major river system – the Elbe flood 2002 as a<br />

case study • ......................................................................................................................................... 87-95<br />

Matthias Oetken, Burkhard Stachel, <strong>Mar</strong>kus Pfenninger and Jörg Oehlmann<br />

Contamination of rivers in Tianjin, China by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons • ............................. 97-111<br />

Z. Shi, S. Tao, B. Pan, W. Fan, X.C. He, Q. Zuo, S.P. Wu, B.G. Li, J. Cao, W.X. Liu et al.<br />

Bioaccumulation of PCBs in the cuttlefish Sepia officinalis from seawater, sediment and food<br />

pathways • ....................................................................................................................................... 113-122<br />

B. Danis, P. Bustamante, O. Cotret, J.L. Teyssié, S.W. Fowler and M. Warnau<br />

The combined effect of lead exposure and high or low dietary calcium on health and<br />

immunocompetence in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) • ..................................................... 123-132<br />

Tinne Snoeijs, Tom Dauwe, Rianne Pinxten, Veerle M. Darras, Lutgar<strong>de</strong> Arckens and <strong>Mar</strong>cel<br />

Eens<br />

In situ exposures using caged organisms: a multi-compartment approach to <strong>de</strong>tect aquatic toxicity<br />

and bioaccumulation • ..................................................................................................................... 133-144<br />

G. Allen Burton, Jr., <strong>Mar</strong>c S. Greenberg, Carolyn D. Rowland, Cameron A. Irvine, Daniel R.<br />

Lavoie, John A. Brooker, Laurie Moore, Delia F.N. Raymer and Ruth A. McWilliam<br />

Using plant biomonitors and flux mo<strong>de</strong>lling to <strong>de</strong>velop O3 dose–response relationships in<br />

Catalonia • ....................................................................................................................................... 145-151<br />

The maximum reservoir capacity of soils for persistent organic pollutants: implications for global<br />

cycling • ........................................................................................................................................... 153-164<br />

M. Dalla Valle, E. Jurado, J. Dachs, A.J. Sweetman and K.C. Jones<br />

Water stri<strong>de</strong>rs (family Gerridae): mercury sentinels in small freshwater ecosystems • .................. 165-171<br />

Timothy D. Jardine, Tom A. Al, Kerry T.B. MacQuarrie, Charles D. Ritchie, Paul A. Arp, Antu<br />

Maprani and Richard A. Cunjak<br />

Mercury baseline levels in Flemish soils (Belgium) • ...................................................................... 173-179<br />

Filip M.G. Tack, Thomas Vanhaesebroeck, <strong>Mar</strong>c G. Verloo, Kurt Van Rompaey and Eric Van<br />

Ranst<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION<br />

Vol. 134, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />

Assessing soil ecotoxicity of methyl tert-butyl ether using earthworm bioassay; closed soil<br />

microcosm test for volatile organic compounds • ........................................................................... 181-186<br />

Youn-Joo An<br />

Effect of organic fertilizers <strong>de</strong>rived dissolved organic matter on pestici<strong>de</strong> sorption and leaching • 187-194<br />

Kun Li, Baoshan Xing and William A. Torello<br />

Microfibril angle in wood of Scots pine trees (Pinus sylvestris) after irradiation from the Chernobyl<br />

nuclear reactor acci<strong>de</strong>nt • ............................................................................................................... 195-199<br />

Mirela Tulik and Aleksandra Rusin<br />

Absence of Hg transpiration by shoot after Hg uptake by roots of six terrestrial plant species • ... 201-208<br />

23


<strong>Mar</strong>ia Greger, Yaodong Wang and Clara Neuschütz<br />

Effects of elevated ozone on leaf δ13C and leaf conductance of plant species grown in seminatural<br />

grassland with or without irrigation • ................................................................................... 209-216<br />

M. Jäggi, M. Saurer, M. Volk and J. Fuhrer<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of the involvement of plant ligno-cellulosic structure in the sequestration of Pb: an X-ray<br />

spectroscopy-based analysis • ....................................................................................................... 217-227<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ta <strong>Mar</strong>miroli, Gianni Antonioli, Elena Maestri and Nelson <strong>Mar</strong>miroli<br />

Nitrogen species in drinking water indicate potential exposure pathway for Balkan En<strong>de</strong>mic<br />

Nephropathy • ................................................................................................................................. 229-237<br />

Nedialka Niagolova, Shawn P. McElmurry, Thomas C. Voice, David T. Long, Evangelos A.<br />

Petropoulos, Ivan Havezov, Karen Chou and Varban Ganev<br />

Cadmium uptake by tobacco as affected by liming, N form, and year of cultivation • .................... 239-246<br />

C.D. Tsadilas, N.A. Karaivazoglou, N.C. Tsotsolis, S. Stamatiadis and V. Samaras<br />

Isotopic characterisation of lead in contaminated soils from the vicinity of a non-ferrous metal<br />

smelter near Plovdiv, Bulgaria • ...................................................................................................... 247-255<br />

Jeffrey R. Bacon and Nikolai S. Dinev<br />

Interactive effect of Brevibacillus brevis and Glomus mosseae, both isolated from Cd<br />

contaminated soil, on plant growth, physiological mycorrhizal fungal characteristics and soil<br />

enzymatic activities in Cd polluted soil • ......................................................................................... 257-266<br />

A. Vivas, J.M. Barea and R. Azcón<br />

Oil spill in the Río <strong>de</strong> la Plata estuary, Argentina: 2-hydrocarbon disappearance rates in sediments<br />

and soils • ........................................................................................................................................ 267-276<br />

J.C. Colombo, A. Barreda, C. Bilos, N. Cappelletti, M.C. Migoya and C. Skorupka<br />

Oil spill in the Río <strong>de</strong> la Plata estuary, Argentina: 1. Biogeochemical assessment of waters,<br />

sediments, soils and biota • ............................................................................................................ 277-289<br />

J.C. Colombo, A. Barreda, C. Bilos, N. Cappelletti, S. Demichelis, P. Lombardi, M.C. Migoya, C.<br />

Skorupka and G. Suárez<br />

Ozone exposure induces the activation of leaf senescence-related processes and morphological<br />

and growth changes in seedlings of Mediterranean tree species • ................................................ 291-300<br />

Àngela Ribas, Josep Peñuelas, Susana Elvira and Benjamín S. Gimeno<br />

Review of disposal technologies for chromated copper arsenate (CCA) treated wood waste, with<br />

<strong>de</strong>tailed analyses of thermochemical conversion processes • ....................................................... 301-314<br />

Lieve Helsen and Eric Van <strong>de</strong>n Bulck<br />

PAH dissipation in a contaminated river sediment un<strong>de</strong>r oxic and anoxic conditions • ................. 315-322<br />

C. Quantin, E.J. Joner, J.M. Portal and J. Berthelin<br />

PCBs and DDT in the serum of juvenile California sea lions: associations with vitamins A and E<br />

and thyroid hormones • ................................................................................................................... 323-332<br />

Cathy Debier, Gina M. Ylitalo, Michael Weise, Frances Gulland, Daniel P. Costa, Burney J. Le<br />

Boeuf, Tanguy <strong>de</strong> Tillesse and Yvan Laron<strong>de</strong>lle<br />

A lysimeter experiment to investigate the leaching of veterinary antibiotics through a clay soil and<br />

comparison with field data • ............................................................................................................ 333-341<br />

Paul Kay, Paul A. Blackwell and Alistair B.A. Boxall<br />

Screening the wetland plant species Alisma plantago-aquatica, Carex rostrata and Phalaris<br />

arundinacea for innate tolerance to zinc and comparison with Eriophorum angustifolium and<br />

Festuca rubra Merlin • ..................................................................................................................... 343-351<br />

David J. Matthews, Bridget M. Moran and <strong>Mar</strong>inus L. Otte<br />

Assessing breeding potential of peregrine falcons based on chlorinated hydrocarbon<br />

concentrations in prey • ................................................................................................................... 353-361<br />

J.E. Elliott, M.J. Miller and L.K. Wilson<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY<br />

INTRA- AND INTERLABORATORY CALIBRATION OF THE DR CALUX® BIOASSAY FOR THE<br />

ANALYSIS OF DIOXINS AND DIOXIN-LIKE CHEMICALS IN SEDIMENTS<br />

Harrie T. Besselink, Cor Schipper, Hans Klamer, Pim Leonards, Henk Verhaar, Emiel Felzel,<br />

Albertinka J. Murk, John Thain, Kazunori Hosoe, Greet Schoeters, Juliette Legler and Bram<br />

Brouwer ..................................................................................................................................................2781<br />

24


EFFECT OF ETHOXYLATE NUMBER AND ALKYL CHAIN LENGTH ON THE PATHWAY AND<br />

KINETICS OF LINEAR ALCOHOL ETHOXYLATE BIODEGRADATION IN ACTIVATED SLUDGE<br />

Nina R. Itrich and Thomas W. Fe<strong>de</strong>rle ..................................................................................................2790<br />

BACTERIAL ENERGETICS, STOICHIOMETRY, AND KINETIC MODELING OF 2,4-<br />

DINITROTOLUENE BIODEGRADATION IN A BATCH RESPIROMETER<br />

Chunlong Zhang and Joseph B. Hughes ...............................................................................................2799<br />

IDENTIFICATION OF ESTROGENIC COMPOUNDS IN WASTEWATER EFFLUENT<br />

Norihi<strong>de</strong> Nakada, Hiroshi Nyunoya, Masaru Nakamura, Akihiko Hara, Taisen Iguchi and<br />

Hi<strong>de</strong>shige Takada ..................................................................................................................................2807<br />

ENHANCEMENT OF PHENANTHRENE SOLUBILIZATION AND BIODEGRADATION BY<br />

TREHALOSE LIPID BIOSURFACTANTS<br />

Jae-Soo Chang, <strong>Mar</strong>k Radosevich, Yan Jin and Daniel K. Cha ............................................................2816<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY<br />

SUBCELLULAR ACCUMULATION OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS IN THE GREEN ALGA<br />

CHLAMYDOMONAS REINHARDTII<br />

Thomas W. Jabusch and Deborah L. Swackhamer ..............................................................................2823<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

A RANKING SYSTEM FOR THE EVALUATION OF INTERSEX CONDITION IN EUROPEAN<br />

FLOUNDER (PLATICHTHYS FLESUS)<br />

Kelly S. Bateman, Grant D. Stentiford and Stephen W. Feist ...............................................................2831<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

ASSESSMENT OF THE TOXICITY OF TRIASULFURON AND ITS PHOTOPRODUCTS USING<br />

AQUATIC ORGANISMS<br />

Emmanuelle Vulliet, Corinne Emmelin, Jean-<strong>Mar</strong>c Chovelon, Céline Chouteau and Bernard<br />

Clement ..................................................................................................................................................2837<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

AN IN SITU TOXICITY IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION METHOD PART I: LABORATORY<br />

VALIDATION<br />

G. Allen Burton Jr. and Juanita F. Nordstrom ........................................................................................2844<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

AN IN SITU TOXICITY IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION METHOD PART II: FIELD VALIDATION<br />

G. Allen Burton Jr. and Juanita F. Nordstrom........................................................................................ 2851<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

INFLUENCE OF DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE ON SUSCEPTIBILITIES AND SENSITIVITIES OF<br />

SIMULIUM VITTATUM IS-7 AND SIMULIUM VITTATUM IIIL-1 (DIPTERA: SIMULIIDAE) TO<br />

CHLORPYRIFOS<br />

Alison H. Hy<strong>de</strong>r, Jay P. Overmyer and Ray Noblet ...............................................................................2856<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

AN AMPHIBIAN MODEL TO TEST THE EFFECTS OF XENOBIOTIC CHEMICALS ON<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF THE HEMATOPOIETIC SYSTEM<br />

Louise A. Rollins-Smith, B. Diane Hopkins and Laura K. Reinert .........................................................2863<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

GENOTOXICITY IN NATIVE FISH ASSOCIATED WITH AGRICULTURAL RUNOFF EVENTS<br />

Andrew Whitehead, Kathryn M. Kuivila, James L. Orlando, Sergey Kotelevtsev and Susan L.<br />

An<strong>de</strong>rson ................................................................................................................................................2868<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

ACCUMULATION OF TRIBUTYLTIN IN HYALELLA AZTECA AS AN INDICATOR OF CHRONIC<br />

TOXICITY: SURVIVAL, GROWTH, AND REPRODUCTION<br />

Adrienne J. Bartlett, Uwe Borgmann, D. George Dixon, Suzanne P. Batchelor and R. James<br />

Maguire ..................................................................................................................................................2878<br />

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]<br />

INFLUENCE OF NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER SOURCE ON ACUTE COPPER, LEAD, AND<br />

CADMIUM TOXICITY TO RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS)<br />

Melissa L. Schwartz, P. Jefferson Curtis and Richard C. Playle ...........................................................2889<br />

INFLUENCE OF MULTIPLE WATER-QUALITY CHARACTERISTICS ON COPPER TOXICITY<br />

TO FATHEAD MINNOWS (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS)<br />

Katherine L. Sciera, J. Jeffery Isely, Joseph R. Tomasso Jr. and Stephen J. Klaine ............................2900<br />

25


PREDICTING MATERNAL BODY BURDENS OF ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES FROM<br />

EGGS AND EVIDENCE OF MATERNAL TRANSFER IN ALLIGATOR MISSISSIPPIENSIS<br />

Richard H. Rauschenberger, <strong>Mar</strong>ía S. Sepúlveda, Jon J. Wiebe, Nancy J. Szabo and Timothy S.<br />

Gross ......................................................................................................................................................2906<br />

POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBON LEVELS IN MUSSELS FROM PRINCE WILLIAM<br />

SOUND, ALASKA, USA, DOCUMENT THE RETURN TO BASELINE CONDITIONS<br />

Paul D. Boehm, David S. Page, John S. Brown, Jerry M. Neff and William A. Burns ...........................2916<br />

STRESS AND IMMUNE RESPONSES OF NESTLING TREE SWALLOWS (TACHYCINETA<br />

BICOLOR) AND EASTERN BLUEBIRDS (SIALIA SIALIS) EXPOSED TO NONPERSISTENT<br />

PESTICIDES AND p,p′-DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLOROETHYLENE IN APPLE ORCHARDS<br />

OF SOUTHERN ONTARIO, CANADA<br />

Gregory J. Mayne, Pamela A. <strong>Mar</strong>tin, Christine A. Bishop and Herman J. Boermans ..........................2930<br />

COMPARATIVE TOXICITY OF OIL, DISPERSANT, AND OIL PLUS DISPERSANT TO SEVERAL<br />

MARINE SPECIES<br />

Chris Fuller, James Bonner, Cheryl Page, Andrew Ernest, Thomas McDonald and Susanne<br />

McDonald ...............................................................................................................................................2941<br />

VALIDATION OF AN AMPHIBIAN SPERM INHIBITION TOXICOLOGICAL TEST METHOD<br />

USING ZINC<br />

Jennie R. Christensen, Christine A. Bishop, John S. Richardson, Bruce Pauli and John Elliott ...........2950<br />

DIETARY MERCURY EXPOSURE AND BIOACCUMULATION IN SOUTHERN LEOPARD FROG<br />

(RANA SPHENOCEPHALA) LARVAE<br />

Jason M. Unrine and Charles H. Jagoe .................................................................................................2956<br />

ADVERSE EFFECTS OF ECOLOGICALLY RELEVANT DIETARY MERCURY EXPOSURE IN<br />

SOUTHERN LEOPARD FROG (RANA SPHENOCEPHALA) LARVAE<br />

Jason M. Unrine, Charles H. Jagoe, William A. Hopkins and Heather A. Brant ....................................2964<br />

COPPER TOXICITY IN RELATION TO SURFACE WATER-DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER:<br />

BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS TO DAPHNIA MAGNA<br />

Kees J.M. Kramer, Robbert G. Jak, Bert van Hattum, Ria N. Hooftman and John J.G. Zwolsman ......2971<br />

PREDICTING THE TOXICITY OF CHROMIUM IN SEDIMENTS<br />

Walter J. Berry, Warren S. Boothman, Jonathan R. Serbst and Philip A. Edwards ..............................2981<br />

HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT<br />

PROBABILISTIC ENVIRONMENTAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF ZINC IN DUTCH SURFACE<br />

WATERS<br />

Patrick A. Van Sprang, Fre<strong>de</strong>rik A.M. Verdonck, Peter A. Vanrolleghem, <strong>Mar</strong>nix L. Vangheluwe<br />

and Colin R. Janssen .............................................................................................................................2993<br />

MODELING SELENIUM BIOACCUMULATION THROUGH ARTHROPOD FOOD WEBS IN SAN<br />

FRANCISCO BAY, CALIFORNIA, USA<br />

Christian E. Schlekat, David G. Purkerson and Samuel N. Luoma<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005.<br />

Environmental Chemistry<br />

MOBILIZATION OF PESTICIDES ON AN AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE FLOODED BY A<br />

TORRENTIAL STORM<br />

David B. Donald, Fraser G. Hunter, Ed Sverko, Bernard D. Hill and Jim Syrgiannis ..................................2<br />

EFFECT OF COEXISTING COMPOUNDS ON THE SORPTION AND REDUCTION OF<br />

TRICHLOROETHYLENE WITH IRON<br />

Hyun-Hee Cho and Jae-Woo Park ............................................................................................................11<br />

QUANTITATION OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS IN FISH FOR HUMAN CANCER RISK<br />

ASSESSMENT: A COMPARATIVE CASE STUDY<br />

Kevin T. Connor, Michelle Eversen, Steave H. Su and Brent L. Finley .....................................................17<br />

TRACKING ACIDIC PHARMACEUTICALS, CAFFEINE, AND TRICLOSAN THROUGH THE<br />

WASTEWATER TREATMENT PROCESS<br />

Paul M. Thomas and Gregory D. Foster ....................................................................................................25<br />

DESORPTION KINETICS OF FLUORANTHENE AND TRIFLURALIN FROM LAKE HURON AND<br />

LAKE ERIE, USA, SEDIMENTS<br />

26


<strong>Mar</strong>c S. Greenberg, G. Allen Burton, Jr, Peter F. Landrum, Matti T. Leppänen and Jussi V. K.<br />

Kukkonen ...................................................................................................................................................31<br />

FATE OF OXYTETRACYCLINE IN STREAMS RECEIVING AQUACULTURE DISCHARGES:<br />

MODEL SIMULATIONS<br />

Peter E. Rose and Joel A. Pe<strong>de</strong>rsen .........................................................................................................40<br />

AIR–WATER GAS EXCHANGE OF CHLORINATED PESTICIDES IN FOUR LAKES SPANNING<br />

A 1,205 METER ELEVATION RANGE IN THE CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS<br />

Andrew C. Wilkinson, Lynda E. Kimpe and Jules M. Blais ........................................................................61<br />

Environmental Toxicology<br />

QUANTITATIVE BIO-IMAGING ANALYSIS FOR EVALUATION OF SEXUAL DIFFERENTIATION<br />

IN GERM CELLS OF olvas-GFP/ST-II YI MEDAKA (ORYZIAS LATIPES) NANOINJECTED IN<br />

OVO WITH ETHINYLESTRADIOL<br />

Takeshi Hano, Yuji Oshima, Toshiaki Oe, Masato Kinoshita, Minoru Tanaka, Yuko Wakamatsu,<br />

Kenjiro Ozato and Tsuneo Honjo ...............................................................................................................70<br />

EFFECTS OF THE PYRETHROID ESFENVALERATE ON LIFE-CYCLE TRAITS AND<br />

POPULATION DYNAMICS OF CHIRONOMUS RIPARIUS—IMPORTANCE OF EXPOSURE<br />

SCENARIO<br />

Valery E. Forbes and An<strong>de</strong>rs Cold ............................................................................................................78<br />

ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF IMIDAZOLIUM-BASED IONIC LIQUIDS ON DAPHNIA<br />

MAGNA<br />

Randall J. Bernot, Michael A. Brueseke, Michelle A. Evans-White and Gary A. Lamberti .......................87<br />

EXPOSURE AND EFFECTS OF 2,3,7,8-TETRACHLORODIBENZO-p-DIOXIN IN TREE<br />

SWALLOWS (TACHYCINETA BICOLOR) NESTING ALONG THE WOONASQUATUCKET<br />

RIVER, RHODE ISLAND, USA<br />

Christine M. Custer, Thomas W. Custer, Cornell J. Rosiu, <strong>Mar</strong>k J. Melancon, John W. Bickham<br />

and Cole W. Matson ..................................................................................................................................93<br />

SINGLE VERSUS MULTIPLE OCCUPANCY—EFFECTS ON TOXICITY PARAMETERS<br />

MEASURED ON EISENIA FETIDA IN LEAD NITRATE–TREATED SOIL<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k Currie, <strong>Mar</strong>k E. Hodson, Rebecca E. Arnold and Caroline J. Langdon ..........................................110<br />

AROCLOR 1254 EXPOSURE REDUCES DISEASE RESISTANCE AND INNATE IMMUNE<br />

RESPONSES IN FASTED ARCTIC CHARR<br />

Alec G. Maule, Even H. Jørgensen, Mathilakath M. Vijayan and Jan-Eirik A. Killie ................................117<br />

MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN KING PENGUIN (APTENODYTES PATAGONICUS)<br />

FEATHERS AT CROZET ISLANDS (SUB-ANTARCTIC): TEMPORAL TREND BETWEEN 1966–<br />

1974 AND 2000–2001<br />

Renaud Scheifler, Michel Gauthier-Clerc, Céline Le Bohec, Nadia Crini, Michaël CŒurdassier,<br />

Pierre-<strong>Mar</strong>ie Badot, Patrick Giraudoux and Yvon Le Maho .....................................................................125<br />

UPTAKE AND DEPURATION OF PARALYTIC SHELLFISH TOXINS IN THE GREEN-LIPPED<br />

MUSSEL, PERNA VIRIDIS: A DYNAMIC MODEL<br />

Ashley M.Y. Li, Peter K.N. Yu, Dennis P.H. Hsieh, Wen-Xiong Wang, Rudolf S.S. Wu and Paul<br />

K.S. Lam ..................................................................................................................................................129<br />

COMPARATIVE THRESHOLDS FOR ACETYLCHOLINESTERASE INHIBITION AND<br />

BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENT IN COHO SALMON EXPOSED TO CHLORPYRIFOS<br />

Jason F. Sandahl, David H. Baldwin, Jeffrey J. Jenkins and Nathaniel L. Scholz ..................................136<br />

COVERT SIGNAL DISRUPTION: ANTI-ECDYSTEROIDAL ACTIVITY OF BISPHENOL A<br />

INVOLVES CROSS TALK BETWEEN SIGNALING PATHWAYS<br />

Xueyan Mu, Cynthia V. Ri<strong>de</strong>r, Gap Soo Hwang, Heather Hoy and Gerald A. LeBlanc ..........................146<br />

ORAL BIOAVAILABILITY OF GLYPHOSATE: STUDIES USING TWO INTESTINAL CELL LINES<br />

Luba Vasiluk, Linda J. Pinto and <strong>Mar</strong>go M. Moore ..................................................................................153<br />

SEASONAL STUDY ON THE Cd, Se, AND Zn UPTAKE BY NATURAL COASTAL<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES<br />

Wen-Xiong Wang, Robert C.H. Dei and Huasheng Hong .......................................................................161<br />

A FIELD-BASED MICROCOSM METHOD TO ASSESS THE EFFECTS OF POLLUTED URBAN<br />

STREAM SEDIMENTS ON AQUATIC MACROINVERTEBRATES<br />

Vincent Pettigrove and Ary Hoffmann ......................................................................................................170<br />

EFFECT OF VOLATILE HYDROCARBON FRACTIONS ON MOBILITY AND EARTHWORM<br />

UPTAKE OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS FROM SOILS AND<br />

SOIL/LAMPBLACK MIXTURES<br />

27


Bill W. Bogan, Kate E. Beardsley, Wendy R. Sullivan, Thomas D. Hayes and Bhupendra K. Soni .......181<br />

RESPONSES OF MOLECULAR INDICATORS OF EXPOSURE IN MESOCOSMS: COMMON<br />

CARP (CYPRINUS CARPIO) EXPOSED TO THE HERBICIDES ALACHLOR AND ATRAZINE<br />

Lina W. Chang, Gregory P. Toth, Denise A. Gordon, David W. Graham, John R. Meier, Charles<br />

W. Knapp, F. Jerry <strong>de</strong>Noyelles Jr., Scott Campbell and David L. Lattier ................................................190<br />

ASSESSMENT OF WHOLE EFFLUENT TOXICITY ON AQUATIC SNAILS: BIOACCUMULATION<br />

OF Cr, Zn, AND Fe, AND INDIVIDUAL EFFECTS IN BIOASSAYS<br />

Michaël C;OEurdassier, Annette <strong>de</strong> Vaufleury, Nadia Crini, Renaud Scheifler and Pierre-<strong>Mar</strong>ie<br />

Badot ........................................................................................................................................................198<br />

EFFECTS OF OZONE EXPOSURE ON NONSPECIFIC PHAGOCYTIC CAPACITY OF<br />

PULMONARY MACROPHAGES FROM AN AMPHIBIAN, BUFO MARINUS<br />

Michael R. Dohm, William J. Mautz, Joy A. Andra<strong>de</strong>, Kapuaola S. Gellert, Loney J. Salas-<br />

Ferguson, Nicola Nicolaisen and Nicole Fujie .........................................................................................205<br />

TIME-DEPENDENT TOXICITY OF DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLOROETHYLENE TO<br />

HYALELLA AZTECA<br />

Peter F. Landrum, Jeffery A. Steevens, Michael McElroy, Duane C. Gossiaux, Jocelyn S. Lewis<br />

and San<strong>de</strong>r D. Robinson ..........................................................................................................................211<br />

REPRODUCTIVE IMPAIRMENT IN ZEBRA FINCHES (TAENIOPYGIA GUTTATA)<br />

Almira L. Hoogesteijn, Timothy J. DeVoogd, Fred W. Quimby, Tony De Caprio and George V.<br />

Kollias .......................................................................................................................................................219<br />

Hazard/Risk Assessment<br />

SETTING SITE-SPECIFIC WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS BY USING TISSUE RESIDUE<br />

CRITERIA AND BIOACCUMULATION DATA. PART 1. METHODOLOGY<br />

John E. Toll, Lucinda M. Tear, David K. DeForest, Kevin V. Brix and William J. Adams 2........................24<br />

SETTING SITE-SPECIFIC WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS BY USING TISSUE RESIDUE<br />

THRESHOLDS AND BIOACCUMULATION DATA. PART 2. CALCULATING SITE-SPECIFIC<br />

SELENIUM WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS FOR PROTECTING FISH AND BIRDS<br />

Kevin V. Brix, John E. Toll, Lucinda M. Tear, David K. DeForest and William J. Adams ........................231<br />

RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS AND HEALTH STATUS IN<br />

HARBOR PORPOISES (PHOCOENA PHOCOENA) STRANDED IN THE UNITED KINGDOM<br />

Paul D. Jepson, Peter M. Bennett, Robert Deaville, Colin R. Allchin, John R. Baker and Robin J.<br />

Law ...........................................................................................................................................................238<br />

ERRATUM............................................................................................................................................... 249<br />

FAO FISHERIES CIRCULAR:<br />

No. 1001, 2004:<br />

Global Aquaculture Outlook in the Next Deca<strong>de</strong>s: An Analysis of National Aquaculture Production<br />

Forecasts to 2030.<br />

FAO FISHERIES REPORT:<br />

No. 738, 2004:<br />

Report of the Expert Consultation on Interactions Between Sea Turtles and Fisheries Within an<br />

Ecosystem Context. Rome, Italy, 9-12 <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

FAO FISHERIES REPORT:<br />

No. 742, 2004:<br />

Report of the Third Intergovernmental Consultation on the Establishment of a Southwest Indian<br />

Ocean Fisheries Commission. Nairobi, Kenya, 27-30 January 2004.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 442, 2004:<br />

Application of risk assessment in the fish industry.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 444, 2004:<br />

Assessment and Management of Seafood Safety and Quality.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

28


No. 452, 2004.<br />

Cambio Climático y Pesquerías regionales en el futuro: Análisis en Colaboración.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 465, 2004:<br />

The Conservation and Management of Shared Fish Stocks: Legal and Economic Aspects.<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 8, December 2004.<br />

Quantifying CaCO3 Microprecipitates Within Developing Surface Mats of <strong>Mar</strong>ine Stromatolites<br />

Using GIS and Digital Image Analysis..................................................................................................... 491<br />

Alexandru Petrisor; Tomohiro Kawaguchi; Alan Decho<br />

Involvement of Microorganisms in the Formation of Carbonate Speleothems in the Cervo Cave<br />

(L'Aquila-Italy).......................................................................................................................................... 497<br />

Paola Cacchio; Rosita Contento; Claudia Ercole; Giorgio Cappuccio; <strong>Mar</strong>ia <strong>Mar</strong>tinez; Aldo Lepidi<br />

Experimental Measurements of the Adsorption of Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas mendocina<br />

Onto Fe-Oxyhydroxi<strong>de</strong>-Coated and Uncoated Quartz Grains................................................................. 511<br />

David Ams; Jeremy Fein; Hailiang Dong; Patricia Maurice<br />

Bacterial Degradation of Dissolved Organic Matter from Two Northern Michigan Streams................... 521<br />

Katherine Young; Patricia Maurice; Kathryn Docherty; Scott Bridgham<br />

Biosignatures and Bacterial Diversity in Hydrothermal Deposits of Solfatara Crater, Italy.................... 529<br />

Mihaela Glamoclija; Laurence Garrel; Jonathan Berthon; Purificación López-García<br />

Further Readings in Geomicrobiology.................................................................................................... 543<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 8, December 2004.<br />

Diel vertical distribution of fish larvae during the winter-mixing period in the Northwestern<br />

Mediterranean • ........................................................................................................................... 1243-1252<br />

A. Sabatés<br />

Age and individual growth of Meso<strong>de</strong>sma mactroi<strong>de</strong>s (Bivalvia) in the southernmost range of its<br />

distribution • ................................................................................................................................ 1253-1259<br />

Sandra M. Fiori and Enrique M. Morsán<br />

Impact of experimental trawling on the benthic assemblage along the Tuscany coast (north<br />

Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy) • ............................................................................................................... 1260-1266<br />

Anna <strong>Mar</strong>ia De Biasi<br />

Feeding preferences of herring (Clupea harengus) and sprat (Sprattus sprattus) in the southern<br />

Baltic Sea • .................................................................................................................................. 1267-1277<br />

Michele Casini, Massimiliano Cardinale and Fredrik Arrhenius<br />

Vertical distribution and feeding patterns in fish foraging on the krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica • 1278-1290<br />

M.S.R. Onsrud, S. Kaartvedt, A. Røstad and T.A. Klevjer<br />

An assessment of the upstream migration and reproductive behaviour of allis shad (Alosa alosa<br />

L.) using acoustic tracking • ........................................................................................................ 1291-1304<br />

M.L. Acolas, M.L. Bégout Anras, V. Véron, H. Jourdan, M.R. Sabatié and J.L. Baglinière<br />

Performance of precautionary reference points in providing management advice on North Sea fish<br />

stocks • ........................................................................................................................................ 1305-1312<br />

G.J. Piet and J.C. Rice<br />

The diet of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) in southern Australian waters • .............. 1313-1329<br />

Karen Evans and <strong>Mar</strong>k A. Hin<strong>de</strong>ll<br />

Mixed and Multi-Stock Fisheries: Introduction • EDITORIAL<br />

Page 1330<br />

Laurence T. Kell, Walter W. Crozier and Christopher M. Legault<br />

Possible solutions to some challenges facing fisheries scientists and managers • ................... 1331-1343<br />

Randall M. Peterman<br />

Managing Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) in the mixed stock environment: challenges and<br />

consi<strong>de</strong>rations • ........................................................................................................................... 1344-1358<br />

W.W. Crozier, P-J. Schön, G. Chaput, E.C.E. Potter, N. Ó Maoiléidigh and J.C. MacLean<br />

29


Estimating and forecasting pre-fishery abundance of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) in the<br />

Northeast Atlantic for the management of mixed-stock fisheries • ............................................. 1359-1369<br />

E.C.E. Potter, W.W. Crozier, P-J. Schön, M.D. Nicholson, D.L. Maxwell, E. Prévost, J. Erkinaro, G.<br />

Gudbergsson, L. Karlsson, L.P. Hansen et al.<br />

Application of pre-fishery abundance mo<strong>de</strong>lling and Bayesian hierarchical stock and recruitment<br />

analysis to the provision of precautionary catch advice for Irish salmon (Salmo salar L.) fisheries •<br />

...................................................................................................................................................... 1370-1378<br />

N. Ó Maoiléidigh, P. McGinnity, E. Prévost, E.C.E Potter, P. Gargan, W.W. Crozier, P. Mills and<br />

W. Roche<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

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

BLOOD ORANGE SLICES PACKAGED WITH FILMS OF DIFFERENT<br />

PERMEABILITIES:CHEMICAL, MICROBIOLOGICAL AND SENSORY STUDIES. By: Caggia, C.;<br />

Lanza, C. M.; Bellomo, S. E.; Pannuzzo, P.; Bianco, M. Lo; Restuccia, C.; Rapisarda, P.. ...................275<br />

EFFECT OF CALCIUM AND FUNGICIDE TREATMENTS ON POSTHARVEST FUNGAL<br />

DISORDERS IN SWEET CHERRIES STORED UNDER NORMAL AND MODIFIED<br />

ATMOSPHERE PACKAGING CONDITIONS. By: Eris, A.; Tezcan, H.; Akbudak, B.; Karabulut, O.<br />

A.. .............................................................................................................................................................293<br />

DETERMINATION OF RESVERATROL AND OTHER PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS IN<br />

EXPERIMENTAL WINES FROM GRAPES SUBJECTED TO DIFFERENT PESTICIDE<br />

TREATMENTS. By: Dugo, G.; Saitta, M.; Giuffrida, D.; Vilasi, F.; La Torre, G. L.. .................................305<br />

STABILITY OF ANTHOCYANINS FROM GRAPE (VITIS VINIFERA L.) SKINS WITH TANNIC<br />

ACID IN A MODEL SYSTEM. By: Falcão, L. D.; Gauche, C.; Barros, D. M.; Prudêncio, E. S.; Gris,<br />

E. F.; Sant'Anna, E. S.; Ogliari, P. J.; Luiz, M. T. B................................................................................. 323<br />

OXIDATIVE STATUS OF EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OILS: HPLC EVALUATION. By: Rovellini, P.;<br />

Cortesi, N.. ...............................................................................................................................................333<br />

INFLUENCE OF BACTROCERA OLEAE INFESTATION ON OLIVE OIL QUALITY DURING<br />

RIPENING OF CHEMLAL OLIVES. By: Tamendjari, A.; Angerosa, F.; Bellal, M. M.............................. 343<br />

EFFECT OF OLIVE FRUIT FLY INFESTATION ON THE QUALITY OF OLIVE OIL FROM<br />

CULTIVARS COBRANÇOSA,MADURAL AND VERDEAL TRANSMONTANA. By: Pereira, J. A.;<br />

Alves, M. R.; Casal, S.; Oliveira, M. B. P. P.. .......................................................................................... 355<br />

AEROBIC HETEROTROPHIC MICROBIAL POPULATIONS ISOLATED FROM A COOKED<br />

VEGETABLE. By: Burgalassi, F.; Fancelli, S.; Settimelli, M.; Cioni, L.; Lanzilao, I.; Fani, R.................. 367<br />

DECREASE OF HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN LEVELS IN HELA TUMOR CELLS BY RED WINE<br />

EXTRACTS. By: Roussou, I.; Lambropoulos, I.; Pagoulatos, G. N.; Roussis, I. G................................. 381<br />

EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT ENOLOGICAL TREATMENTS ON DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN WINES.<br />

By: Castellari, M.; Simonato, B.; Tornielli, G. B.; Spinelli, P.; Ferrarini, R............................................... 387<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

Charming complexity..............................................................................................................................1881<br />

What is a no<strong>de</strong>?......................................................................................................................................1883<br />

Michael Heads<br />

A touch of theory<br />

Species diversity and en<strong>de</strong>mism of five major Malesian islands: diversityarea relationships................1893<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>co C. Roos, Paul J. A. Keßler, S. Robbert Gradstein, Pieter Baas<br />

The applicability of Rapoport's rule to the marine molluscs of the Americas.........................................1909<br />

R. R. Fortes, R. S. Absalão<br />

The nature of spatial transitions in the Arctic..........................................................................................1917<br />

H. E. Epstein, J. Beringer, W. A. Gould, A. H. Lloyd, C. D. Thompson, F. S. Chapin III, G. J.<br />

Michaelson, C. L. Ping, T. S. Rupp, D. A. Walker<br />

Birds and plants<br />

Relationships between the <strong>de</strong>mography and distribution of two bird-dispersed plants in an island<br />

archipelago..............................................................................................................................................1935<br />

K. C. Burns<br />

Birdflower interactions in the Macaronesian islands...............................................................................1945<br />

Alfredo Valido, Yoko L. Dupont, Jens M. Olesen<br />

30


Basic biogeographies<br />

Freshwater diatom biogeography in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago...................................................1955<br />

Giselle Bouchard, K. Gajewski, P. B. Hamilton<br />

A marine fish follows Wallace's Line: the phylogeography of the three-spot seahorse<br />

(Hippocampus trimaculatus, Syngnathidae, Teleostei) in Southeast Asia.............................................1975<br />

Sara A. Lourie, Amanda C. J. Vincent<br />

Zoogeography of the southern African ascidian fauna...........................................................................1987<br />

Carmen Primo, Elsa Vázquez<br />

Descriptive biogeography of Tomicus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) species in Spain.................................2011<br />

D. Gallego, F. Cánovas, M. A. Esteve, J. Galián<br />

Historical and present distribution of coyote (Canis latrans) in Mexico and Central America................2025<br />

Mircea G. Hidalgo-Mihart, Lisette Cantú-Salazar, Alberto González-Romero, Carlos A. López-<br />

González<br />

Vegetation changes and megafaunal extinction in South America: comments on <strong>de</strong> Vivo and<br />

Carmignotto (2004).................................................................................................................................2039<br />

Astolfo G.M. Araujo, Walter A. Neves, Luís Beethoven Piló<br />

Do we need a process-based approach to nature conservation? Continuing the parable of Green<br />

Mountain, Ascension Island....................................................................................................................2041<br />

David M. Wilkinson<br />

Getting to grips with biological diversity measurement...........................................................................2043<br />

Dave Raffaelli<br />

What about the plants?...........................................................................................................................2043<br />

Paddy Coker<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Special Issue No. 4, Fall 2004:<br />

NERRS research and Monitoring. A Nationally Integrated Program.<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 20, No. 3, Summer 2004.<br />

Alternatives to the Mathematical Mo<strong>de</strong>ling of Beaches. J. Andrew G. Cooper and Orrin H. Pilkey641–644.<br />

Short-term Observations of Suspen<strong>de</strong>d Particulate Matter in a Macro-tidal Inverse Estuary: The<br />

Upper Gulf of California. Luis G. Alvarez and Sarah E. Jones........................................................645–654.<br />

Multimodal Analysis of the Acoustic Field at the Río <strong>de</strong> la Plata Estuary. Silvia R. Salvadores and<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ta I.E. <strong>de</strong> Milou...........................................................................................................................655–661.<br />

A Mo<strong>de</strong>lling Study of Coastal Upwelling Driven by Wind and Mean<strong>de</strong>rs of the Brazil Current.<br />

Renato M. Castelao, Edmo J. D. Campos, and Jerry L. Miller........................................................662–671.<br />

Cyclic Sand Bar Migration on a Spit-platform in the Danish Wad<strong>de</strong>n Sea—Spit-platform<br />

Morphology Related to Variations in Water Level. Niels Vinther, Jørgen Nielsen, and Troels<br />

Aagaard............................................................................................................................................672–679.<br />

Holocene Gulf Levels: Recognition Issues and an Updated Sea-Level Curve. Ervin G. Otvos......680–699.<br />

Geomorphological Features and Evolution of the Ensenada <strong>de</strong> Atacames (Provincia <strong>de</strong><br />

Esmeraldas, Ecuador). P. R. Fe<strong>de</strong>rici and G. Rodolfi.....................................................................700–708.<br />

Hydrochemistry in Reclaimed Lands of the 2000 Olympic Games Site, Sydney, Australia. Jeong-<br />

Yul Suh, G.F. Birch, and K. Hughes................................................................................................709–721.<br />

Long-Term Effects of Nitrogen Fertilization on Plant Community Structure on a Coastal Barrier<br />

Island Dune Chronosequence. Frank P. Day, Christine Conn, Edward Crawford, and <strong>Mar</strong>k<br />

Stevenson........................................................................................................................................722–730.<br />

Effective Form Roughness of Ripples for Waves. Hyoseob Kim.....................................................731–738.<br />

CZM Applications of Argus Coastal Imaging at the Gold Coast, Australia. Ian L. Turner, S.G.J.<br />

Aarninkhof, T.D.T. Dronkers, and J. McGrath.................................................................................739–752.<br />

Field Measurements of Beachface Salinity Structure using Cross-Borehole Resistivity Imaging. Ian<br />

L. Turner and R. Ian Acworth...........................................................................................................753–760.<br />

Germination and Early-Seedling Establishment Capacity of Pancratium maritimum L.<br />

(Amaryllidaceae) on Coastal Dunes in the North-Western Mediterranean. Elena Balestri and F.<br />

Cinelli...............................................................................................................................................761–770.<br />

Sediment Transport Paths in the Westerschel<strong>de</strong>: One-Dimensional Alternative to Determine<br />

Sediment Trend. Paulo S. Lucio, Henri S. Dupont, and Emerson C. Bo<strong>de</strong>van...............................771–775.<br />

31


Effect of El Niño (1997–98) on Beaches of the Peninsular Gulf Coast of Florida. Tiffany L. Hepner<br />

and Richard A. Davis Jr...................................................................................................................776–791.<br />

Examining Local Ecological Knowledge of Hurricane Impacts in a Mangrove Forest Using an<br />

Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) Approach. John M. Kovacs, Jacek Malczewski, and Francisco<br />

Flores-Verdugo................................................................................................................................792–800.<br />

The Impact of Damming the Ord River on the Fine Sediment Budget in Cambridge Gulf,<br />

Northwestern Australia. E. Wolanski, S. Spagnol, and D. Williams.................................................801–807.<br />

A Comparison of Inter-Site, Intra-Site, Intra-Sample and Instrument Variability in Environmental<br />

Magnetic Data: An Example Based on the Gwendraeth Estuary, South Wales, U.K.. Colin A.<br />

Booth, John Wal<strong>de</strong>n, Adrian Neal, John P. Smith, and Edward Morgan ........................................808–813.<br />

Flow Field in the Inner Shelf Along the Central East Coast of India During the Southwest Monsoon<br />

Season. Thota V. Narasimha Rao...................................................................................................814–827.<br />

Shoreline Changes and Near Shore Processes Along Ennore Coast, East Coast of South India. P.<br />

Kasinatha Pandian, S. Ramesh, M. V. Ramana Murthy, S. Ramachandran, and S. Thayumanavan828–845.<br />

Relationship between Indicators of Faecal Pollution and Presence of Pathogenic Microorganisms<br />

in Coastal Seawaters. G. Gabutti, A. De Donno, R. Erroi, D. Liaci, F. Bagordo, and M.T. Montagna846–852.<br />

Process Based Mo<strong>de</strong>ling of Total Longshore Sediment Transport. Kevin A. Haas and Daniel M.<br />

Hanes...............................................................................................................................................853–861.<br />

Seasonal Changes in a Sandy Beach Fish Assemblage at Canto Gran<strong>de</strong>, Santa Catarina, South<br />

Brazil. João P. Barreiros, Vicente Figna, Maurício Hostim-Silva, and Ricardo S. Santos...............862–870.<br />

Terrestrial Methods for Monitoring Cliff Erosion in an Urban Environment. S.A. Gulyaev and J.S.<br />

Buckeridge.......................................................................................................................................871–878.<br />

Computing the Discharge through Granular Material Aquifers using the Equations of Fluid<br />

Mechanics. A<strong>de</strong>l Kamel...................................................................................................................879–883.<br />

Mapping Shoreline Position Using Airborne Laser Altimetry. William Robertson V, Dean Whitman,<br />

Keqi Zhang, and Stephen P. Leatherman.......................................................................................884–892.<br />

A Set of 3-D Nested Mo<strong>de</strong>ls for Tidal Propagation from the Argentinean Continental Shelf to the<br />

Río <strong>de</strong> la Plata Estuary—Part I. M2. C.G. Simionato, W. Dragani, M. Nuñez, and M. Engel.........893–912.<br />

Observations on the Stability St. Andrew Bay Inlets in Florida. Mamta Jain, Ashish J. Mehta,<br />

Jacobus van <strong>de</strong> Kreeke, and Michael R. Dombrowski....................................................................913–919.<br />

Geoarchaeological Interpretation of the Canopic, Largest of the Relict Nile Delta Distributaries,<br />

Egypt. Jean-Daniel Stanley, Andrew G. Warne, and Gerard Schnepp...........................................920–930.<br />

Impact of Beach Restoration on the Deep-burrowing Ghost Shrimp, Callichirus islagran<strong>de</strong>. A.<br />

Lelania Bilo<strong>de</strong>au and Robert P. Bourgeois......................................................................................931–936.<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 20, No. 4, Fall 2004.<br />

ESR Dating of Coral Reef Terraces on Curaçao (Netherlands Antilles) with Estimates of Younger<br />

Pleistocene Sea Level Elevations. Gerhard Schellmann, Ulrich Radtke, Anja Scheffers, Franziska<br />

Whelan, and Dieter Kelletat.............................................................................................................947–957.<br />

Direct Sediment Dispersal from Mountain to Shore, with Bypassing via Three Human-Modified<br />

Channel Systems to Lake Annecy, SE France. Jean-Daniel Stanley and Thomas F. Jorstad.......958–969.<br />

The Role of Sedimentation in Estuarine <strong>Mar</strong>sh Development within the San Francisco Estuary,<br />

California, USA. Steven D. Culberson, Theodore C. Foin, and Joshua N. Collins..........................970–979.<br />

Stratigraphy of Back-Barrier Coastal Dunes, Northern North Carolina and Southern Virginia. K.G.<br />

Havholm, D.V. Ames, G.R. Whittecar, B.A. Wenell, S.R. Riggs, H.M. Jol, G.W. Berger, and M.A.<br />

Holmes.............................................................................................................................................980–999.<br />

Tidal Hydrodynamics in Golfo Nuevo, Argentina, and the Adjacent Continental Shelf. Carlos A.<br />

Mazio, Walter C. Dragani, Fernando J. Caviglia, and Jorge L. Pousa........................................1000–1011.<br />

Picture Essay of Pacific Island Coasts. William R. Dickinson .....................................................1012–1034.<br />

Late Pleistocene to Holocene Wetlands Now Covered by Sand, along the Carmel Coast, Israel,<br />

and their Relation to Human Settlement: An Example from Dor. D. Sivan, D. Eliyahu, and A.<br />

Raban...........................................................................................................................................1035–1048.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling the Effect of Tidal Wetting and Drying on Shore Platform Development. Alan S.<br />

Trenhaile......................................................................................................................................1049–1060.<br />

Artificial Neural Networks for Wave Propagation. S.N. Londhe and M.C. Deo...........................1061–1069.<br />

Impacts of Bauxite Sediment Inputs on a Carbonate-Dominated Embayment, Discovery Bay,<br />

Jamaica. Christopher T. Perry and Kevin G. Taylor....................................................................1070–1079.<br />

32


Tourism-Generated Earnings in the Coastal Zone: A Regional Analysis. Yehuda L. Klein, Jeffrey<br />

P. Osleeb, and <strong>Mar</strong>iano R. Viola..................................................................................................1080–1088.<br />

Investigation of Hydrocarbon Pollution in the Vicinity of United Arab Emirates Coasts Using Visible<br />

and Near Infrared Remote Sensing Data. F. M. Howari..............................................................1089–1095.<br />

Erosion Measurements in Linear, Oscillatory, and Combined Oscillatory and Linear Flow<br />

Regimes. Richard Jepsen, Jesse Roberts, and Joseph Gailani..................................................1096–1101.<br />

Coastal Change and Beach Ridges along the Northwest Coast of Peru: Image and GIS Analysis<br />

of the Chira, Piura, and Colán Beach-Ridge Plains. Stacy Shafer Rogers, Daniel H. Sandweiss,<br />

Kirk A. Maasch, Daniel F. Belknap, and Peggy Agouris..............................................................1102–1125.<br />

Potential Bioavailability of Heavy Metals in Surface Sediments from the Altata-Ensenada <strong>de</strong>l<br />

Pabellón Lagoon, SE Gulf of California. Carlos Green-Ruiz and Fe<strong>de</strong>rico Páez-Osuna............1126–1134.<br />

Wave Transformation Mo<strong>de</strong>ling at Cape Fear River Entrance, North Carolina. Edward F.<br />

Thompson, Jane McKee Smith, and Herman C. Miller ...............................................................1135–1154.<br />

Seasonal Dynamics of a Microtidal Pocket Beach with Posidonia oceanica Seabeds (Mallorca,<br />

Spain). G. Basterretxea, A. Orfila, A. Jordi, B. Casas, P. Lynett, P.L.F. Liu, C. M. Duarte, and J.<br />

Tintoré..........................................................................................................................................1155–1164.<br />

Using Hyperspectral Imaging for the Assessment of Mudflat Surface Stability. G.M. Smith, A.G.<br />

Thomson, I. Möller, and J.C. Kromkamp.....................................................................................1165–1175.<br />

Macrobenthic Distribution Patterns at a Sewage Disposal Site in the Inner Shelf off <strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata<br />

(SW Atlantic). Rodolfo Elías, Eduardo A. Vallarino, <strong>Mar</strong>celo Scagliola, and Fe<strong>de</strong>rico I. Isla......1176–1182.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling the Influence of Wind and Rivers on Current, Salinity and Temperature over the French<br />

Guiana Continental Shelf during the Rainy Season. Cristèle Chevalier, Melika Baklouti, and Alfred<br />

Ramamonjiarisoa.........................................................................................................................1183–1197.<br />

Importance of Storm Events in Controlling Ecosystem Structure and Function in a Florida Gulf<br />

Coast Estuary. Stephen E. Davis III, Jaye E. Cable, Daniel L. Chil<strong>de</strong>rs, Carlos Coronado-Molina,<br />

John W. Day Jr, Clinton D. Hittle, Christopher J. Mad<strong>de</strong>n, Enrique Reyes, David Rudnick, and<br />

Fred Sklar.....................................................................................................................................1198–1208.<br />

Incorporation of a Mass-Conserving Inundation Scheme into a Three Dimensional Storm Surge<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>l. Lian Xie, Leonard J. Pietrafesa, and Machuan Peng......................................................1209–1223.<br />

Designing Offshore Breakwaters Using Empirical Relationships: A Case Study from Norfolk,<br />

United Kingdom. Frank Thomalla and Chris E. Vincent..............................................................1224–1230.<br />

Spatial Variability of Wave Data from Todos Santos Bay, Baja California, Mexico. Asdrubal<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tinez-Diaz-De-Leon................................................................................................................1231–1236.<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of Anthropogenic Nitrogen Enrichment of the Littoral Waters of East Central Florida.<br />

Peter J. Barile...............................................................................................................................1237–1245.<br />

A Simple Low Cost Method for One Person Beach Profiling. Irene Delgado and Graham Lloyd1246–1252.<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 4, November 2004.<br />

LARVAL MORPHOLOGY OF A RECENTLY RECOGNIZED BARNACLE, CHTHAMALUS<br />

NEGLECTUS (CIRRIPEDIA: THORACICA: CHTHAMALIDAE), FROM HONG KONG. Yan Yan<br />

and Benny K. K. Chan .....................................................................................................................519–528.<br />

ASPECTS OF THE ECOLOGY OF LAMPROGLENA CLARIAE (COPEPODA: LERNAEIDAE)<br />

FROM THE VAAL RIVER SYSTEM, SOUTH AFRICA. A. M. Tsotetsi, A. Avenant-Ol<strong>de</strong>wage, and<br />

S. N. Mashego.................................................................................................................................529–536.<br />

MORPHOLOGY OF THE SIXTH LIMB OF THE CYPRIDINIDAE (OSTRACODA:<br />

MYODOCOPINA). Louis S. Kornicker.............................................................................................537–540.<br />

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE GENUS PSEUDOMMA<br />

(PERACARIDA: MYSIDA). Kenneth Meland and Endre Willassen.................................................541–557.<br />

DISTRIBUTION OF THE NEUSTONIC ISOPOD IDOTEA METALLICA IN RELATION TO SHELF-<br />

SLOPE FRONTAL STRUCTURES. Pere Abelló, Guillermo Guerao, and Meritxell Codina...........558–566.<br />

A NEW GENUS AND SPECIES OF FRESHWATER TANAIDACEAN,<br />

PSEUDOHALMYRAPSEUDES AQUADULCIS (APSEUDOMORPHA: PARAPSEUDIDAE), FROM<br />

NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA. Kim Larsen and Tom Hansknecht.................................567–575.<br />

LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF CRANGON URITAI (DECAPODA: CRANGONIDAE) REARED IN<br />

THE LABORATORY. Hui Yu Li and Sung Yun Hong......................................................................576–591.<br />

33


THE CAROTENOPROTEINS DURING EMBRYOGENESIS AND LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF<br />

THE EUROPEAN LOBSTER HOMARUS GAMMARUS. Desy M. H. Mantiri, Geneviève Nègre-<br />

Sadargues, Jose-Carlos G. Milicua, and René Castillo...................................................................592–602.<br />

MORPHOLOGICAL AND GENETIC COMPARISONS OF GOLDEN CRAYFISH, ORCONECTES<br />

LUTEUS, AND RUSTY CRAYFISH, O. RUSTICUS, WITH RANGE CORRECTIONS IN IOWA<br />

AND MINNESOTA. James E. Wetzel, William J. Poly, and James W. Fetzner Jr..........................603–617.<br />

INFESTATION BY PSEUDIONE HUMBOLDTENSIS (BOPYRIDAE) IN THE SQUAT LOBSTERS<br />

CERVIMUNIDA JOHNI AND PLEURONCODES MONODON (GALATHEIDAE) OFF NORTHERN<br />

CHILE. M. Teresa González and Enzo Acuña ................................................................................618–624.<br />

ZOOGEOGRAPHY OF HERMIT CRABS (DECAPODA: DIOGENIDAE, PAGURIDAE) FROM<br />

FOUR COASTAL LAGOONS IN THE GULF OF MEXICO. A. Raz-Guzman, A. J. Sánchez, P.<br />

Peralta, and R. Florido.....................................................................................................................625–636.<br />

ZOEAL DEVELOPMENT OF PALAPEDIA INTEGRA (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA: XANTHIDAE)<br />

REARED IN THE LABORATORY. Hyun Sook Ko, Hye Suck An, and Stephen Sulkin..................637–651.<br />

FACTORS INFLUENCING REFUGE OCCUPATION BY STONE CRAB MENIPPE ADINA<br />

JUVENILES IN MISSISSIPPI SOUND. Virginia R. Shervette, Harriet M. Perry, Chet F. Rakocinski,<br />

and Patricia M. Biesiot.....................................................................................................................652–665.<br />

EMBRYOLOGY OF DECAPOD CRUSTACEANS I. EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE<br />

MANGROVE CRABS GONIOPSIS PULCHRA AND ARATUS PISONII (DECAPODA:<br />

BRACHYURA). <strong>Mar</strong>celo García-Guerrero and Michel E. Hendrickx...............................................666–672.<br />

SEMIDOME BUILDING AS SEXUAL SIGNALING IN THE FIDDLER CRAB UCA LACTEA<br />

(BRACHYURA: OCYPODIDAE). Tae Won Kim, John H. Christy, and Jae C. Choe......................673–679.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculation, interpretation and<br />

comparison when census intervals vary ..................................................................................................929<br />

SIMON L. LEWIS, OLIVER L. PHILLIPS, DOUGLAS SHEIL, BARBARA VINCETI, TIMOTHY R.<br />

BAKER, SANDRA BROWN, ANDREW W. GRAHAM, NIRO HIGUCHI, DAVID W. HILBERT,<br />

WILLIAM F. LAURANCE, JEAN LEJOLY, YADVINDER MALHI, ABEL MONTEAGUDO, PERCY<br />

NÚÑEZ VARGAS, BONAVENTURE SONKÉ, NUR SUPARDI , M.N. , JOHN W. TERBORGH,<br />

RODOLFO VÁSQUEZ MARTÍNEZ<br />

Long-term canopy dynamics in a large area of temperate old-growth beech (Fagus crenata) forest:<br />

analysis by aerial photographs and digital elevation mo<strong>de</strong>ls ...................................................................945<br />

YUKO HENBO, AKEMI ITAYA, NAOYUKI NISHIMURA, SHIN-ICHI YAMAMOTO<br />

Factors predisposing episodic drought-induced tree mortality in Nothofagus site, climatic<br />

sensitivity and growth trends ....................................................................................................................954<br />

MARIA LAURA SUAREZ, LUCIANA GHERMANDI, THOMAS KITZBERGER<br />

Novel phenotypes among early generation hybrids of two Louisiana iris species: flooding<br />

experiments ..............................................................................................................................................967<br />

JILL A. JOHNSTON, LISA A. DONOVAN, MICHAEL L. ARNOLD<br />

Plant isolation reduces outcross pollen receipt in a partially self-compatible herb ..................................977<br />

DAVID H. DUNCAN, ADRIENNE B. NICOTRA, JEFF T. WOOD, SAUL A. CUNNINGHAM<br />

Ribosomal RNA gene sequence diversity in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomeromycota)................ 986<br />

ALIA RODRIGUEZ, JUSTIN PETER CLAPP, JOHN CHARLES DODD<br />

Resistance variation within and among host populations in a plantpathogen metapopulation:<br />

implications for regional pathogen dynamics ...........................................................................................990<br />

ANNA-LIISA LAINE<br />

Nutrient limitation of plant growth and forage quality in Arctic coastal marshes ...................................1001<br />

JACQUELINE T. NGAI, ROBERT L. JEFFERIES<br />

Regulation of anti-herbivore <strong>de</strong>fence by Fucus vesiculosus in response to various cues ....................1011<br />

SVEN ROHDE, MARKUS MOLIS, MARTIN WAHL<br />

Herbivory influences tree lines ...............................................................................................................1019<br />

DAVID M. CAIRNS, JON MOEN<br />

Consequences of low mobility in spatially and temporally heterogeneous ecosystems .......................1025<br />

GLENN R. MATLACK, JOHN MONDE<br />

Rates, pathways and drivers for peatland <strong>de</strong>velopment in the Hudson Bay Lowlands, northern<br />

Ontario, Canada .....................................................................................................................................1036<br />

34


PAUL H. GLASER, BARBARA C. S. HANSEN, DONALD I. SIEGEL, ANDREW S. REEVE, PAUL<br />

J. MORIN<br />

Tectonic drivers for vegetation patterning and landscape evolution in the Albany River region of<br />

the Hudson Bay Lowlands .....................................................................................................................1054<br />

PAUL H. GLASER, DONALD I. SIEGEL, ANDREW S. REEVE, JAN A. JANSSENS, DAVID R.<br />

JANECKY<br />

Pinguicula L. ...........................................................................................................................................1071<br />

YOLANDE HESLOP-HARRISON<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 40, No. 3, June 2004.<br />

HOST PARASITE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN FRESHWATER PHYTOPLANKTON AND<br />

CHYTRID FUNGI (CHYTRIDIOMYCOTA) ..............................................................................................437<br />

Bas W. Ibelings, Arnout De Bruin, Maiko Kagami, Machteld Rijkeboer, Michaela Brehm, Ellen Van<br />

Donk<br />

REDUCED GENETIC DIVERSITY AND INCREASED POPULATION DIFFERENTIATION IN<br />

PERIPHERAL AND OVERHARVESTED POPULATIONS OF GIGARTINA SKOTTSBERGII<br />

(RHODOPHYTA, GIGARTINALES) IN SOUTHERN CHILE....................................................................454<br />

Sylvain Faugeron, Enrique A. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez, Juan A. Correa, Leyla Car<strong>de</strong>nas, Christophe Destombe,<br />

Myriam Valero<br />

ASSESSMENT OF TEMPERATURE AND NUTRIENT LIMITATION ON SEASONAL DYNAMICS<br />

AMONG SPECIES OF SARGASSUM FROM A CORAL REEF IN SOUTHERN TAIWAN.....................463<br />

Ray-Lien Hwang, Chuan-Chuan Tsai, Tse-Min Lee<br />

ALLELOCHEMICALS OF BOTRYOCOCCUS BRAUNII (CHLOROPHYCEAE) ....................................474<br />

In-Ze Chiang, Wen-Ya Huang, Jiunn-Tzong Wu<br />

USING EPILITHIC ALGAL COMMUNITIES TO ASSESS TROPHIC STATUS IN IRISH LAKES...........481<br />

Dean M. DeNicola, Elvira <strong>de</strong> Eyto, Alice Wemaere, Kenneth Irvine<br />

PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PHOTOSYNTHETIC RESPONSES OF SYNECHOCYSTIS AQUATILIS<br />

F. AQUATILIS (CYANOPHYCEAE) TO ELEVATED LEVELS OF ZINC.................................................496<br />

Cristiana C. P. <strong>de</strong> Magalhães, Daniel Cardoso, Cesar P. dos Santos, Ricardo M. Chaloub<br />

INFLUENCE OF LOW LIGHT AND A LIGHT: DARK CYCLE ON NO3 UPTAKE,<br />

INTRACELLULAR NO3 , AND NITROGEN ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION BY MARINE<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON..................................................................................................................................505<br />

Joseph A. Needoba, Paul J. Harrison<br />

THE MECHANISM OF ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION DURING ALGAL NITRATE ASSIMILATION<br />

AS ILLUMINATED BY THE 15N/14N OF INTRACELLULAR NITRATE..................................................517<br />

Joseph A. Needoba, Daniel M. Sigman, Paul J. Harrison<br />

RELATIONSHIP OF GROWTH AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS WITH COLONY SIZE IN AN EDIBLE<br />

CYANOBACTERIUM, GE-XIAN-MI NOSTOC (CYANOPHYCEAE) .......................................................523<br />

Kunshan Gao, Hongxia Ai<br />

EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION ON GROWTH AND PHLOROTANNINS IN FUCUS GARDNERI<br />

(PHAEOPHYCEAE) JUVENILES AND EMBRYOS.................................................................................527<br />

Brianne E. Henry, Kathryn L. Van Alstyne<br />

KINETICS OF NITRATE, AMMONIUM, AND UREA UPTAKE BY FOUR INTERTIDAL<br />

SEAWEEDS FROM NEW ZEALAND.......................................................................................................534<br />

Julia C. Phillips, Catriona L. Hurd<br />

MOLECULAR DIVERGENCE AND CHARACTERIZATION OF TWO CHLOROPLAST DIVISION<br />

GENES, FTSZ1 AND FTSZ2, IN THE UNICELLULAR GREEN ALGA NANNOCHLORIS<br />

BACILLARIS (CHLOROPHYTA) .............................................................................................................546<br />

Tomojirou Koi<strong>de</strong>, Tomokazu Yamazaki, Maki Yamamoto, <strong>Mar</strong>iko Fujishita, Hi<strong>de</strong>o Nomura,<br />

Yohsuke Moriyama, Nobuko Sumiya, Sachihiro Matsunaga, Wataru Sakamoto, Shigeyuki Kawano<br />

INDUCTION OF PHOTORESPIRATION BY LIGHT IN THE CENTRIC DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA<br />

WEISSFLOGII (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE): MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION AND<br />

PHYSIOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES.....................................................................................................557<br />

Micaela Schnitzler Parker, E. Virginia Armbrust, Jonah Piovia-Scott, Richard G. Keil<br />

A GLYCOPROTEIN NONCOVALENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH CELL-WALL POLYSACCHARIDE<br />

OF THE RED MICROALGA PORPHYRIDIUM SP. (RHODOPHYTA) ....................................................568<br />

Roshan Prakash Shrestha, Yacob Weinstein, Dudy Bar-Zvi, Shoshana (Malis) Arad<br />

35


BIOGEOGRAPHY AND TAXONOMY OF BATRACHOSPERMUM HELMINTHOSUM<br />

(BATRACHOSPERMALES, RHODOPHYTA) IN JAPAN INFERRED FROM RBCL GENE<br />

SEQUENCES............................................................................................................................................581<br />

Takeaki Hanyuda, Yuzuru Suzawa, Tamie Suzawa, Shogo Arai, Hiroshi Sato, Kunihiko Ueda,<br />

Shigeru Kumano<br />

CULTIVATION OF ARTHROSPIRA (SPIRULINA) PLATENSIS (CYANOPHYCEAE) BY FED-<br />

BATCH ADDITION OF AMMONIUM CHLORIDE AT EXPONENTIALLY INCREASING FEEDING<br />

RATES......................................................................................................................................................589<br />

João Carlos M. Carvalho, Fernando R. Francisco, Kleber A. Almeida, Sunao Sato, Attilio Converti<br />

FLUORESCENCE IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION USING rRNA-TARGETED PROBES FOR SIMPLE<br />

AND RAPID IDENTIFICATION OF THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATES ALEXANDRIUM<br />

TAMARENSE AND ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA................................................................................. 598<br />

Yoshihiko Sako, Shoko Hosoi-Tanabe, Aritsune Uchida<br />

606 CRYOPRESERVATION OF THE GAMETOPHYTIC CELLS OF LAMINARIALES<br />

(PHAEOPHYTA) IN LIQUID NITROGEN<br />

Kazuyoshi Kuwano, Shigeki Kono, Young-Hyun Jo, Jong-Ahm Shin, Naotsune Saga<br />

HIGH-RESOLUTION MAGIC ANGLE SPINNING NMR ANALYSIS OF WHOLE CELLS OF<br />

CHAETOCEROS MUELLERI (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) AND COMPARISON WITH 13C-NMR<br />

AND DISTORTIONLESS ENHANCEMENT BY POLARIZATION TRANSFER 13C-NMR<br />

ANALYSIS OF LIPOPHILIC EXTRACTS.................................................................................................611<br />

Matil<strong>de</strong> S. Chauton, Trond R. Størseth, Jostein Krane<br />

2004 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE PHYCOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 7-12 AUGUST<br />

2004 WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA ...........................................................................................................620<br />

2005 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE PHYCOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA AND 8TH<br />

INTERNATIONAL PHYCOLOGICAL CONGRESS 13-19 AUGUST 2005, DURBAN, SOUTH<br />

AFRICA.....................................................................................................................................................620<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 10, October 2004.<br />

Tropical Instability Wave Variability in the Pacific and Its Relation to Large-Scale Currents. Eric S.<br />

Johnson and Jeffrey A. Proehl.................................................................................................... 2121–2147.<br />

Synoptic-Scale Air–Sea Flux Forcing in the Western North Pacific: Observations and Their Impact<br />

on SST and the Mixed Layer. Bo Qiu, Shuiming Chen and Peter Hacker................................. 2148–2159.<br />

Antarctic Intermediate Water Circulation and Variability in a Coupled Climate Mo<strong>de</strong>l. Agus<br />

Santoso and Matthew H. England.............................................................................................. 2160–2179.<br />

A Spectral Technique for Estimating Turbulent Stress, Scalar Flux Magnitu<strong>de</strong>, and Eddy Viscosity<br />

in the Ocean Boundary Layer un<strong>de</strong>r Pack Ice. Miles G. McPhee.............................................. 2180–2188.<br />

Convectively Driven Mixing in the Bottom Boundary Layer. J. N. Moum, A. Perlin, J. M. Klymak, M.<br />

D. Levine, T. Boyd and P. M. Kosro ........................................................................................... 2189–2202.<br />

Roles of Mesoscale Eddies in the Kuroshio Paths. Yasumasa Miyazawa, Xinyu Guo and Toshio<br />

Yamagata.................................................................................................................................... 2203–2222.<br />

Loop Current Eddy Interaction with the Western Boundary in the Gulf of Mexico. S. A. Frolov, G.<br />

G. Sutyrin, G. D. Rowe and L. M. Rothstein............................................................................... 2223–2237.<br />

Transformation of the Warm Waters of the North Atlantic from a Geostrophic Streamfunction<br />

Perspective. Paula Pérez-Brunius, Tom Rossby and D. Randolph Watts................................. 2238–2256.<br />

Baroclinically Unstable Geostrophic Turbulence in the Limits of Strong and Weak Bottom Ekman<br />

Friction: Application to Midocean Eddies. Brian K. Arbic and Glenn R. Flierl ............................ 2257–2273.<br />

A Quasigeostrophic Analysis of a Mean<strong>de</strong>r in the Palamós Canyon: Vertical Velocity, Geopotential<br />

Ten<strong>de</strong>ncy, and a Relocation Technique. Ananda Pascual, Damià Gomis, Robert L. Haney and<br />

Simón Ruiz.................................................................................................................................. 2274–2287.<br />

Energy Dissipation of Unsteady Wave Breaking on Currents. Aifeng Yao and Chin H. Wu...... 2288–2304.<br />

The Sensitivity and Stability of the Ocean's Thermohaline Circulation to Finite-Amplitu<strong>de</strong><br />

Perturbations. Mu Mu, Liang Sun and Henk A. Dijkstra............................................................. 2305–2315.<br />

Field Measurements of Duration-Limited Growth of Wind-Generated Ocean Surface Waves at<br />

Young Stage of Development*. Paul A. Hwang and David W. Wang........................................ 2316–2326.<br />

Oyashio Southward Intrusion and Cross-Gyre Transport Related to Diapycnal Upwelling in the<br />

Okhotsk Sea. Hiroaki Tatebe and Ichiro Yasuda........................................................................ 2327–2341.<br />

36


JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 11, November 2004.<br />

Wind Profile and Drag Coefficient over Mature Ocean Surface Wave Spectra. Tetsu Hara and<br />

Stephen E. Belcher..................................................................................................................... 2345–2358.<br />

Effects of Noise on Thorpe Scales and Run Lengths. Helen L. Johnson and Chris Garrett...... 2359–2372.<br />

Coastline Direction, Interannual Flow, and the Strong El Niño Currents along Australia's Nearly<br />

Zonal Southern Coast. Jianke Li and Allan J. Clarke................................................................. 2373–2381.<br />

Interannual to Inter<strong>de</strong>cadal Variability in the Japan Sea Based on a New Grid<strong>de</strong>d Upper Water<br />

Temperature Dataset. Shoshiro Minobe, Akinori Sako and Makoto Nakamura......................... 2382–2397.<br />

Formation of the South Pacific Shallow Salinity Minimum: A Southern Ocean Pathway to the<br />

Tropical Pacific. Johannes Karstensen....................................................................................... 2398–2412.<br />

Dynamics of Willapa Bay, Washington: A Highly Unsteady, Partially Mixed Estuary. N. S. Banas,<br />

B. M. Hickey, P. MacCready and J. A. Newton .......................................................................... 2413–2427.<br />

The Effects of Mesoscale Eddies on the Main Subtropical Thermocline. Cara C. Henning and<br />

Geoffrey K. Vallis........................................................................................................................ 2428–2443.<br />

The Importance of Nonlinear Cross-Shelf Momentum Flux during Wind-Driven Coastal Upwelling*.<br />

Steven J. Lentz and David C. Chapman..................................................................................... 2444–2457.<br />

The Response of Buoyant Coastal Plumes to Upwelling-Favorable Winds*. Steven Lentz...... 2458–2469.<br />

Sea-Ice Drift on the Northeastern Shelf of Sakhalin Island. Georgy V. Shevchenko, Alexan<strong>de</strong>r B.<br />

Rabinovich and Richard E. Thomson......................................................................................... 2470–2491.<br />

Nonuniform Upwelling in a Shallow-Water Mo<strong>de</strong>l of the Antarctic Bottom Water in the Brazil<br />

Basin*. Olivier <strong>Mar</strong>chal and Jonas Nycan<strong>de</strong>r............................................................................. 2492–2513.<br />

Inter<strong>de</strong>cadal Sea Level Fluctuations at Hawaii. Yvonne L. Firing, <strong>Mar</strong>k A. Merrifield, Thomas A.<br />

Schroe<strong>de</strong>r and Bo Qiu ................................................................................................................ 2514–2524.<br />

Ocean Response and Feedback to the SST Dipole in the Tropical Atlantic*. Terrence M. Joyce,<br />

Clau<strong>de</strong> Frankignoul, Jiayan Yang and Helen E. Phillips ............................................................ 2525–2540.<br />

Anisotropic Gent–McWilliams Parameterization for Ocean Mo<strong>de</strong>ls. Richard D. Smith and Peter R.<br />

Gent ............................................................................................................................................ 2541–2564.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

How to assess toxin ingestion and post-ingestion partitioning in zooplankton? .......................1369-1377(9)<br />

Gary S. Caldwell; Susan B. Watson; Matthew G. Bentley<br />

Diapause in the calanoid freshwater copepod Eudiaptomus graciloi<strong>de</strong>s ..............................1379-1388(10)<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tina Zeller; Raquel Jiménez-Melero; Barbara Santer<br />

Complete larval and early juvenile <strong>de</strong>velopment of the mangrove crab Perisesarma fasciatum<br />

(Crustacea: Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from Singapore, with a larval comparison of Parasesarma<br />

and Perisesarma .....................................................................................................................1389-1408(20)<br />

Guillermo Guerao; Klaus Anger; U. W. E. Nettelmann; Christoph D. Schubart<br />

Zooplankton in the Ligurian Sea: Part I. Characterization of their dispersion, relative abundance<br />

and environment during summer 1999 ...................................................................................1409-1418(10)<br />

Duncan E. McGehee; David A. Demer; Joseph D. Warren<br />

Zooplankton in the Ligurian Sea: Part II. Exploration of their physical and biological forcing<br />

functions during summer 2000 ..................................................................................................1419-1427(9)<br />

Joseph D. Warren; David A. Demer; Duncan E. McGehee; Rossella Di Mento; J. Fabrizio Borsani<br />

Seasonal variations of bacterial abundance and biomass and their relation to phytoplankton in the<br />

hypertrophic tropical lagoon Ciénaga Gran<strong>de</strong> <strong>de</strong> Santa <strong>Mar</strong>ta, Colombia .............................1429-1439(11)<br />

Klaus Gocke; Carlos Hernán<strong>de</strong>z; Hanna Giesenhagen; Hans-Georg Hoppe<br />

Spatial heterogeneity of zooplankton biomass and size structure in southern Québec lakes:<br />

variation among lakes and within lake among epi-, meta- and hypolimnion strata ................1441-1458(18)<br />

Stéphane Masson; Berna<strong>de</strong>tte Pinel-Alloul; Pierre Dutilleul<br />

Effects of growth medium, temperature, salinity and seawater source on the growth of<br />

Gymnodinium catenatum (Dinophyceae) from Bahía Concepción, Gulf of California, Mexico 1459-1470(12)<br />

C. J. Band-Schmidt; L. Morquecho; C. H. Lechuga-Devéze; D. M. An<strong>de</strong>rson<br />

Picocyanobacterial photosynthetic efficiency un<strong>de</strong>r Daphnia grazing pressure ......................1471-1477(7)<br />

Cristiana Callieri; Esteban Balseiro; Roberto Bertoni; Beatriz Mo<strong>de</strong>nutti<br />

Summer coastal zooplankton biomass and copepod community structure near the Italian Terra<br />

Nova Base (Terra Nova Bay, Ross Sea, Antarctica) ..............................................................1479-1488(10)<br />

37


Luigi Pane; Mirvana Feletti; Barbara Francomacaro; Gian Luigi <strong>Mar</strong>iottini<br />

Diel and vertical variability of seston food quality and quantity in a small subalpine<br />

oligomesotrophic lake .............................................................................................................1489-1498(10)<br />

Sangkyu Park; Su<strong>de</strong>ep Chandra; Dörthe C. Müller-Navarra; Charles R. Goldman<br />

The volume of water filtered by a Continuous Plankton Recor<strong>de</strong>r sample: the effect of ship speed 1499-1506(8)<br />

T. D. Jonas; A. Walne; G. Beaugrand; L. Gregory; G. C. Hays<br />

Potential toxicity of chrysophytes affiliated with Poterioochromonas and related ‘Spumella-like’<br />

flagellates ..................................................................................................................................1507-1514(8)<br />

Jens Boenigk; Peter Stadler<br />

Distribution of plankton related to the mesoscale physical structure within the surface mixed layer<br />

in the southwestern East Sea, Korea .....................................................................................1515-1528(14)<br />

Jung-Hoon Kang; Woong-Seo Kim; Kyung-Il Chang; Jae-Hoon Noh<br />

Bioluminescence response of four species of dinoflagellates to fully <strong>de</strong>veloped pipe flow ...1529-1546(18)<br />

Michael I. Latz; Jennifer C. Nauen; Jim Rohr<br />

In situ egg production rate of the planktonic copepod Acartia steueri in Ilkwang Bay, southeastern<br />

coast of Korea ...........................................................................................................................1547-1553(7)<br />

Yeongha Jung; Hyung-Ku Kang; Yong Joo Kang<br />

First record of paralarvae of Scaeurgus unicirrhus (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) ..................1555-1558(4)<br />

Author: Giambattista Bello<br />

Variability and predictability of the empirical conversion factor for converting 3H-thymidine uptake<br />

into bacterial carbon production for a eutrophic lake ................................................................1559-1566(8)<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r K. T. Kirschner; Peter Wihlidal; Branko Velimirov<br />

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 49, No. 6, November 2004.<br />

Jonsson, Per R., Mona Johansson, and Richard W. Pierce<br />

Attachment to suspen<strong>de</strong>d particles may improve foraging and reduce predation risk for tintinnid<br />

ciliates ...........................................................................................................................................1907-1914<br />

Jakobsen, Hans H., and Suzanne L. Strom<br />

Circadian cycles in growth and feeding rates of heterotrophic protist plankton ...........................1915-1922<br />

Smith, Jennifer E., Celia M. Smith, Peter S. Vroom, Kevin L. Beach, and Steven Miller<br />

Nutrient and growth dynamics of Halimeda tuna on Conch Reef, Florida Keys: Possible influence<br />

of internal ti<strong>de</strong>s on nutrient status and physiology........................................................................ 1923-1936<br />

Fuchs, Heidi L., Lauren S. Mullineaux, and Andrew R. Solow<br />

Sinking behavior of gastropod larvae (Ilyanassa obsoleta) in turbulence ....................................1937-1948<br />

Metaxas, Anna<br />

Spatial and temporal patterns in larval supply at hydrothermal vents on the northeast Pacific<br />

Ocean ............................................................................................................................................1949-1956<br />

Lesser, Michael P., Miles D. Lamare, and Michael F. Barker<br />

Transmission of ultraviolet radiation through the Antarctic annual sea ice and its biological effects<br />

on sea urchin embryos ..................................................................................................................1957-1963<br />

Paris, Claire B., and Robert K. Cowen<br />

Direct evi<strong>de</strong>nce of a biophysical retention mechanism for coral reef fish larvae 1964-1979<br />

Pan, Jin-Fen, and Wen-Xiong Wang<br />

Differential uptake of dissolved and particulate organic carbon by the marine mussel Perna viridis 1980-1991<br />

Larned, Scott T., Vladimir I. Nikora, and Barry J. F. Biggs<br />

Mass-transfer-limited nitrogen and phosphorus uptake by stream periphyton: A conceptual mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />

and experimental evi<strong>de</strong>nce ...........................................................................................................1992-2000<br />

Logue, Jürg Brendan, Christopher T. Robinson, Christoph Meier, and Jan Roelof Van <strong>de</strong>r Meer<br />

Relationship between sediment organic matter, bacteria composition, and the ecosystem<br />

metabolism of alpine streams .......................................................................................................2001-2010<br />

Pullin, Michael J., Stefan Bertilsson, Jared V. Goldstone, and Bettina M. Voelker<br />

Effects of sunlight and hydroxyl radical on dissolved organic matter: Bacterial growth efficiency<br />

and production of carboxylic acids and other substrates ..............................................................2011-2022<br />

Meckler, A. N., C. J. Schubert, G. L. Cowie, S. Peiffer, and M. Dittrich<br />

New organic matter <strong>de</strong>gradation proxies: Valid in lake systems?.................................................2023-2033<br />

Cammack, W. K. Levi, Jacob Kalff, Yves T. Prairie, and Erik M. Smith<br />

Fluorescent dissolved organic matter in lakes: Relationships with heterotrophic metabolism .....2034-2045<br />

38


Thomsen, Uffe, Bo Thamdrup, David A. Stahl, and Donald E. Canfield<br />

Pathways of organic carbon oxidation in a <strong>de</strong>ep lacustrine sediment, Lake Michigan .................2046-2057<br />

Furukawa, Yoko, April C. Smith, Joel E. Kostka, Janet Watkins, and Clark R. Alexan<strong>de</strong>r<br />

Quantification of macrobenthic effects on diagenesis using a multicomponent inverse mo<strong>de</strong>l in salt<br />

marsh sediments ...........................................................................................................................2058-2072<br />

Glud, Ronnie N., and Mathias Mid<strong>de</strong>lboe<br />

Virus and bacteria dynamics of a coastal sediment: Implication for benthic carbon cycling ........2073-2081<br />

Ferdie, Meredith, and James W. Fourqurean<br />

Responses of seagrass communities to fertilization along a gradient of relative availability of<br />

nitrogen and phosphorus in a carbonate environment .................................................................2082-2094<br />

Blain, Stéphane, Cécile Guieu, Hervé Claustre, Karine Leblanc, Thierry Moutin, Bernard<br />

Quéguiner, Joséphine Ras, and Géraldine Sarthou<br />

Availability of iron and major nutrients for phytoplankton in the north-east Atlantic Ocean .........2095-2104<br />

Leonardos, Nikos, and Richard J. Gei<strong>de</strong>r<br />

Responses of elemental and biochemical composition of Chaetoceros muelleri to growth un<strong>de</strong>r<br />

varying light and nitrate:phosphate supply ratios and their influence on critical N : P .................2105-2114<br />

Twining, Benjamin S., Stephen B. Baines, and Nicholas S. Fisher<br />

Element stoichiometries of individual plankton cells collected during the Southern Ocean Iron<br />

Experiment (SOFeX)..................................................................................................................... 2115-2128<br />

Oliver, Jacques L., Richard T. Barber, Walker O. Smith, Jr., and Hugh W. Ducklow<br />

The heterotrophic bacterial response during the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) .....2129-2140<br />

Timmermans, Klaas R., Bas van <strong>de</strong>r Wagt, and Hein J. W. <strong>de</strong> Baar<br />

Growth rates, half saturation constants, and silicate, nitrate, and phosphate <strong>de</strong>pletion in relation to<br />

iron availability of four large open-ocean diatoms from the Southern Ocean ...............................2141-2151<br />

Arnold, Katharine H., Rachael S. Shreeve, Angus Atkinson, and Andrew Clarke<br />

Growth rates of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba: Comparison of the instantaneous growth rate<br />

method with nitrogen and phosphorus stoichiometry ...................................................................2152-2161<br />

Duarte, Carlos M., Susana Agustí, and Dolors Vaqué<br />

Controls on planktonic metabolism in the Bay of Blanes, north-western Mediterranean littoral ..2162-2170<br />

Chan, Francis, Michael L. Pace, Robert W. Howarth, and Roxanne M. <strong>Mar</strong>ino<br />

Bloom formation in heterocystic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria: The <strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce on colony size<br />

and zooplankton grazing ...............................................................................................................2171-2178<br />

Kutser, Tiit<br />

Quantitative <strong>de</strong>tection of chlorophyll in cyanobacterial blooms by satellite remote sensing ........2179-2189<br />

Rao, Yerubandi R., Michael G. Skafel, and Murray N. Charlton<br />

Circulation and turbulent exchange characteristics during the thermal bar in Lake Ontario ........2190-2200<br />

Anthony, Kenneth R. N., Peter V. Ridd, Alan R. Orpin, Piers Larcombe, and Janice Lough<br />

Temporal variation in light availability in coastal benthic habitats: Effects of clouds, turbidity, and<br />

ti<strong>de</strong>s ...............................................................................................................................................2201-2211<br />

Grossart, Hans-Peter, Thorsten Brinkhoff, Torben <strong>Mar</strong>tens, Claus Duerselen, Gerd Liebezeit, and<br />

Meinhard Simon<br />

Tidal dynamics of dissolved and particulate matter and bacteria in a tidal flat ecosystem in spring<br />

and fall ...........................................................................................................................................2212-2222<br />

Sutula, <strong>Mar</strong>tha, Thomas S. Bianchi, and Brent A. McKee<br />

Effect of seasonal sediment storage in the lower Mississippi River on the flux of reactive<br />

particulate phosphorus to the Gulf of Mexico ...............................................................................2223-2235<br />

Blomqvist, Sven, Anneli Gunnars, and Ragnar Elmgren<br />

Why the limiting nutrient differs between temperate coastal seas and freshwater lakes: A matter of<br />

salt .................................................................................................................................................2236-2241<br />

Sansone, Francis J., Andrew W. Graham, and William M. Berelson<br />

Methane along the western Mexican margin ................................................................................2242-2255<br />

Rippey, Brian, Cathrine L. Rose, and Richard W. Douglas<br />

A mo<strong>de</strong>l for lead, zinc, and copper in lakes ..................................................................................2256-2264<br />

Poulain, A. J., M. Amyot, D. Findlay, S. Telor, T. Barkay, and H. Hintelmann<br />

Biological and photochemical production of dissolved gaseous mercury in a boreal lake ...........2265-2275<br />

Zhang, Jinzhong, Feiyue Wang, James D. House, and Bryan Page<br />

Thiols in wetland interstitial waters and their role in mercury and methylmercury speciation...... 2276-2286<br />

Notes<br />

39


Shikano, Shuichi, Eisuke Kikuchi, Shigeto Takagi, and Hi<strong>de</strong>yuki Doi<br />

Volcanic heat flux and short-term holomixis during the summer stratification period in a crater<br />

lake ................................................................................................................................................2287-2292<br />

Bärlocher, Felix, and Heinz Bren<strong>de</strong>lberger<br />

Clearance of aquatic hyphomycete spores by a benthic suspension fee<strong>de</strong>r ...............................2292-2296<br />

Ianson, Debby, George A. Jackson, <strong>Mar</strong>tin V. Angel, Richard S. Lampitt, and Adrian B. Burd<br />

Effect of net avoidance on estimates of diel vertical migration .....................................................2297-2303<br />

Lomas, Michael W., Ashley Swain, Ryan Shelton, and James W. Ammerman<br />

Taxonomic variability of phosphorus stress in Sargasso Sea phytoplankton ...............................2303-2309<br />

Bradbury, Ian R., Steven E. Campana, Paul Bentzen, and Paul V. R. Snelgrove<br />

Synchronized hatch and its ecological significance in rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax in St. <strong>Mar</strong>y’s<br />

Bay, Newfoundland .......................................................................................................................2310-2315<br />

Errata<br />

Laws, E. A., and T. T. Bannister<br />

Erratum: Nutrient- and light-limited growth of Thalassiosira fluviatilis in continuous culture with<br />

implications for phytoplankton growth in the ocean ...............................................................................2316<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 281, 2004.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>chetti A, Trainer VL, Harrison PJ<br />

Environmental conditions and phytoplankton dynamics associated with Pseudo-nitzschia<br />

abundance and domoic acid in the Juan <strong>de</strong> Fuca eddy..........................................................................1-12<br />

Barlow RG, Aiken J, Moore GF, Holligan PM, Laven<strong>de</strong>r S<br />

Pigment adaptations in surface phytoplankton along the eastern boundary of the Atlantic Ocean......13-26<br />

Elmetri I, Bell PRF<br />

Effects of phosphorus on the growth and nitrogen fixation rates of Lyngbya majuscula:<br />

implications for management in Moreton Bay, Queensland..................................................................27-35<br />

Roleda MY, van <strong>de</strong> Poll WH, Hanelt D, Wiencke C<br />

PAR and UVBR effects on photosynthesis, viability, growth and DNA in different life stages of<br />

coexisting Gigartinales: implications for recruitment and zonation pattern ...........................................37-50<br />

Coyer JA, Diekmann OE, Serrão EA, Procaccini G, Milchakova N, Pearson GA, Stam WT, Olsen<br />

JL<br />

Population genetics of dwarf eelgrass Zostera noltii throughout its biogeographic range....................51-62<br />

Jones RJ, Bowyer J, Hoegh-Guldberg O, Blackall LL<br />

Dynamics of a temperature-related coral disease outbreak..................................................................63-77<br />

Gallucci F, Netto SA<br />

Effects of the passage of cold fronts over a coastal site: an ecosystem approach...............................79-92<br />

Cerrato RM, Caron DA, Lonsdale DJ, Rose JM, Schaffner RA<br />

Effect of the northern quahog Mercenaria mercenaria on the <strong>de</strong>velopment of blooms of the brown<br />

ti<strong>de</strong> alga Aureococcus anophagefferens.............................................................................................93-108<br />

Hudson IR, Pond DW, Billett DSM, Tyler PA, Lampitt RS, Wolff GA<br />

Temporal variations in fatty acid composition of <strong>de</strong>ep-sea holothurians: evi<strong>de</strong>nce of benthopelagic<br />

coupling.................................................................................................................................109-120<br />

Bulleri F, Chapman MG, Un<strong>de</strong>rwood AJ<br />

Patterns of movement of the limpet Cellana tramoserica on rocky shores and retaining seawalls..121-129<br />

Schmidt K, Tarling GA, Plathner N, Atkinson A<br />

Moult cycle-related changes in feeding rates of larval krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica and<br />

Thysanoessa spp...............................................................................................................................131-143<br />

Roast SD, Widdows J, Pope N, Jones MB<br />

Sediment-biota interactions: mysid feeding activity enhances water turbidity and sediment<br />

erodability...........................................................................................................................................145-154<br />

Viitasalo S, Viitasalo M<br />

Predation by the mysid shrimps Mysis mixta and M. relicta on benthic eggs of Bosmina longispina<br />

maritima (Cladocera) in the northern Baltic Sea................................................................................155-163<br />

Papaspyrou S, Thessalou-Legaki M, Kristensen E<br />

Impact of Pestarella tyrrhena on benthic metabolism in sediment microcosms enriched with<br />

seagrass and macroalgal <strong>de</strong>tritus......................................................................................................165-179<br />

Moksnes PO<br />

40


Interference competition for space in nursery habitats: <strong>de</strong>nsity-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt effects on growth and<br />

dispersal in juvenile shore crabs Carcinus maenas...........................................................................181-191<br />

Karaiskou N, Triantafyllidis A, Triantaphyllidis C<br />

Shallow genetic structure of 3 species of the genus Trachurus in European waters........................193-205<br />

Miller AK, Sy<strong>de</strong>man WJ<br />

Rockfish response to low-frequency ocean climate change as revealed by the diet of a marine bird<br />

over multiple time scales....................................................................................................................207-216<br />

Jung S, Hou<strong>de</strong> ED<br />

Production of bay anchovy Anchoa mitchilli in Chesapeake Bay: application of size-based theory.217-232<br />

Harris LA, Buckley B, Nixon SW, Allen BT<br />

Experimental studies of predation by bluefish Pomatomus saltatrix in varying <strong>de</strong>nsities of seagrass<br />

and macroalgae.................................................................................................................................233-239<br />

Galbraith PS, Browman HI, Racca RG, Skiftesvik AB, Saint-Pierre JF<br />

Effect of turbulence on the energetics of foraging in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua larvae..................241-257<br />

Peck DR, Smithers BV, Krockenberger AK, Congdon BC<br />

Sea surface temperature constrains wedge-tailed shearwater foraging success within breeding<br />

seasons..............................................................................................................................................259-266<br />

Zhao L, Schell DM<br />

Stable isotope ratios in harbor seal Phoca vitulina vibrissae: effects of growth patterns on<br />

ecological records..............................................................................................................................267-273<br />

Mitani Y, Watanabe Y, Sato K, Cameron MF, Naito Y<br />

3D diving behavior of Wed<strong>de</strong>ll seals with respect to prey accessibility and abundance...................275-281<br />

Das K, Siebert U, Fontaine M, Jauniaux T, Holsbeek L, Bouquegneau JM<br />

Ecological and pathological factors related to trace metal concentrations in harbour porpoises<br />

Phocoena phocoena from the North Sea and adjacent areas...........................................................283-295<br />

COMMENT<br />

Thiemann GW, Budge SM, Bowen WD, Iverson SJ<br />

Comment on Grahl-Nielsen et al. (2003) 'Fatty acid composition of the adipose tissue of polar<br />

bears and of their prey: ringed seals, bear<strong>de</strong>d seals and harp seals'...............................................297-301<br />

REPLY COMMENT<br />

Grahl-Nielsen O, An<strong>de</strong>rsen M, Derocher AE, Ly<strong>de</strong>rsen C, Wiig Ø, Kovacs KM<br />

Reply to Comment on Grahl-Nielsen et al. (2003): sampling, data treatment and predictions in<br />

investigations on fatty acids in marine mammals..............................................................................303-306<br />

Erratum<br />

Behrens et al., Vol. 279:129-139 (2004)...................................................................................................307<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 282, 2004.<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<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 />

41


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 corals143-149<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>posits....205-219<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 />

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 DE, 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 />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 283, 2004.<br />

Caron G, Michel C, Gosselin M<br />

42


Seasonal contributions of phytoplankton and fecal pellets to the organic carbon sinking flux in the<br />

North Water (northern Baffin Bay)...........................................................................................................1-13<br />

Höglan<strong>de</strong>r H, Larsson U, Hajdu S<br />

Vertical distribution and settling of spring phytoplankton in the offshore NW Baltic Sea proper...........15-27<br />

Fujiki T, Toda T, Kikuchi T, Aono H, Taguchi S<br />

Phosphorus limitation of primary productivity during the spring-summer blooms in Sagami Bay,<br />

Japan .....................................................................................................................................................29-38<br />

Nieto-Cid M, Álvarez-Salgado XA, Brea S, Pérez FF<br />

Cycling of dissolved and particulate carbohydrates in a coastal upwelling system (NW Iberian<br />

Peninsula)..............................................................................................................................................39-54<br />

Visser AW, Jackson GA<br />

Characteristics of the chemical plume behind a sinking particle in a turbulent water column...............55-71<br />

Johnson ZI<br />

Description and application of the background irradiance gradient-single turnover fluorometer<br />

(BIG-STf)................................................................................................................................................73-80<br />

Teo SLH, Boustany A, Blackwell S, Walli A, Weng KC, Block BA<br />

Validation of geolocation estimates based on light level and sea surface temperature from<br />

electronic tags........................................................................................................................................81-98<br />

Ibarra-Obando SE, Smith SV, Poumian-Tapia M, Camacho-Ibar V, Carriquiry JD, Montes-Hugo M<br />

Benthic metabolism in San Quintin Bay, Baja California, Mexico........................................................99-112<br />

Weidner K, Lages BG, da Gama BAP, Molis M, Wahl M, Pereira RC<br />

Effect of mesograzers and nutrient levels on induction of <strong>de</strong>fenses in several Brazilian macroalgae113-125<br />

Bowles JW, Bell SS<br />

Simulated herbivory and the dynamics of disease in Thalassia testudinum.....................................127-132<br />

Leys SP, Wilson K, Holeton C, Reiswig HM, Austin WC, Tunnicliffe V<br />

Patterns of glass sponge (Porifera, Hexactinellida) distribution in coastal waters of British<br />

Columbia, Canada.............................................................................................................................133-149<br />

Robbart ML, Peckol P, Scordilis SP, Curran HA, Brown-Saracino J<br />

Population recovery and differential heat shock protein expression for the corals Agaricia<br />

agaricites and A. tenuifolia in Belize..................................................................................................151-160<br />

Andréfouët S, Payri C, Hochberg EJ, Hu C, Atkinson MJ, Muller-Karger FE<br />

Use of in situ and airborne reflectance for scaling-up spectral discrimination of coral reef<br />

macroalgae from species to communities .........................................................................................161-177<br />

Raymond JF, Himmelman JH, Gu<strong>de</strong>rley HE<br />

Sex differences in biochemical composition, energy content and allocation to reproductive effort in<br />

the brooding sea star Leptasterias polaris.........................................................................................179-190<br />

McCarthy DA, Young CM<br />

Effects of water-borne gametes on the aggregation behavior of Lytechinus variegatus...................191-198<br />

Seuront L, Hwang JS, Tseng LC, Schmitt FG, Souissi S, Wong CK<br />

Individual variability in the swimming behavior of the sub-tropical copepod Oncaea venusta<br />

(Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida).........................................................................................................199-217<br />

Takahashi K, Kawaguchi K<br />

Reproductive biology of the intertidal and infralittoral mysids Archaeomysis kokuboi and A.<br />

japonica on a sandy beach in NE Japan ...........................................................................................219-231<br />

Pittman SJ, McAlpine CA, Pittman KM<br />

Linking fish and prawns to their environment: a hierarchical landscape approach...........................233-254<br />

Green J, Jones R, Brownell S<br />

Age and growth of larval cod and haddock on Georges Bank during 1995 and 1996......................255-268<br />

Kimball ME, Miller JM, Whitfield PE, Hare JA<br />

Thermal tolerance and potential distribution of invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles complex) on<br />

the east coast of the United States....................................................................................................269-278<br />

Burger AE, Hitchcock CL, Davoren GK<br />

Spatial aggregations of seabirds and their prey on the continental shelf off SW Vancouver Island.279-292<br />

NOTE<br />

Bost CA, Charrassin JB, Clerquin Y, Ropert-Cou<strong>de</strong>rt Y, Le Maho Y<br />

Exploitation of distant marginal ice zones by king penguins during winter........................................293-297<br />

COMMENT<br />

Hays GC, Bro<strong>de</strong>rick AC, Godley BJ, Luschi P, Nichols WJ<br />

43


Tracking turtles to their <strong>de</strong>ath............................................................................................................299-300<br />

REPLY COMMENT<br />

Chaloupka M, Parker D, Balazs G<br />

Tracking turtles to their <strong>de</strong>ath—reply to Hays et al............................................................................301-302<br />

AS I SEE IT<br />

Giménez L<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ine community ecology: importance of trait-mediated effects propagating through complex life<br />

cycles.................................................................................................................................................303-310<br />

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 11, November 2004.<br />

Research Articles:<br />

C. M. Pusch, M. Broghammer, G. J. Nicholson, A. G. Nerlich, A. Zink, I. Kennerknecht, L.<br />

Bachmann, and N. Blin<br />

PCR-Induced Sequence Alterations Hamper the Typing of Prehistoric Bone Samples for<br />

Diagnostic Achondroplasia Mutations ...........................................................................................2005-2011<br />

Eva-Liis Loogväli, Urmas Roostalu, Boris A. Malyarchuk, Miroslava V. Derenko, Toomas Kivisild,<br />

Ene Metspalu, Kristiina Tambets, Maere Reidla, Helle-Viivi Tolk, Jüri Parik, Erwan Pennarun, Sirle<br />

Laos, Arina Lunkina, <strong>Mar</strong>ia Golubenko, Lovorka Barac, <strong>Mar</strong>ijana Pericic, Oleg P. Balanovsky,<br />

Vladislava Gusar, Elsa K. Khusnutdinova, Vadim Stepanov, Valery Puzyrev, Pavao Rudan, Elena<br />

V. Balanovska, Elena Grechanina, Christelle Richard, Jean-Paul Moisan, André Chaventré,<br />

Nicholas P. Anagnou, Kalliopi I. Pappa, Emmanuel N. Michalodimitrakis, Mireille Claustres,<br />

Mukad<strong>de</strong>s Gölge, Ilia Mikerezi, Esien Usanga, and Richard Villems<br />

Disuniting Uniformity: A Pied Cladistic Canvas of mtDNA Haplogroup H in Eurasia ...................2012-2021<br />

Jean-Nicolas Volff, Hans Lehrach, Richard Reinhardt, and Daniel Chourrout<br />

Retroelement Dynamics and a Novel Type of Chordate Retrovirus-like Element in the Miniature<br />

Genome of the Tunicate Oikopleura dioica ..................................................................................2022-2033<br />

Shin-ichi Yokobori, Naoya Fukuda, Mitsue Nakamura, Tomoko Aoyama, and Tairo Oshima<br />

Long-Term Conservation of Six Duplicated Structural Genes in Cephalopod Mitochondrial<br />

Genomes .......................................................................................................................................2034-2046<br />

Jason A. Wil<strong>de</strong>r, Zahra Mobasher, and Michael F. Hammer<br />

Genetic Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for Unequal Effective Population Sizes of Human Females and Males ..........2047-2057<br />

I. King Jordan, Leonardo <strong>Mar</strong>iño-Ramírez, Yuri I. Wolf, and Eugene V. Koonin<br />

Conservation and Coevolution in the Scale-Free Human Gene Coexpression Network .............2058-2070<br />

Shozo Yokoyama and Naomi Takenaka<br />

The Molecular Basis of Adaptive Evolution of Squirrelfish Rhodopsins .......................................2071-2078<br />

Jerzy K Kulski, Tatsuya Anzai, Takashi Shiina, and Hi<strong>de</strong>toshi Inoko<br />

Rhesus Macaque Class I Duplicon Structures, Organization, and Evolution Within the Alpha Block<br />

of the Major Histocompatibility Complex .......................................................................................2079-2091<br />

Alexandra M. Lopes, Francesc Calafell, and António Amorim<br />

Microsatellite Variation and Evolutionary History of PCDHX/Y Gene Pair Within the Xq21.3/Yp11.2<br />

Hominid-Specific Homology Block ................................................................................................2092-2101<br />

Andrew F. Hugall and Michael S. Y. Lee<br />

Molecular Claims of Gondwanan Age for Australian Agamid Lizards are Untenable ..................2102-2110<br />

Yi Li, Ya-ping Qian, Xiao-jing Yu, Yin-qiu Wang, Ding-gui Dong, Wei Sun, Run-mei Ma, and Bing<br />

Su<br />

Recent Origin of a Hominoid-Specific Splice Form of Neuropsin, a Gene Involved in Learning and<br />

Memory .........................................................................................................................................2111-2115<br />

Günter P. Wagner, Claudia Fried, Sonja J. Prohaska, and Peter F. Stadler<br />

Divergence of Conserved Non-Coding Sequences: Rate Estimates and Relative Rate Tests ....2116-2121<br />

Daniel Papillon, Yvan Perez, Xavier Caubit, and Yannick Le Parco<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification of Chaetognaths as Protostomes Is Supported by the Analysis of Their Mitochondrial<br />

Genome ........................................................................................................................................2122-2129<br />

Zhi Zhang, Tina M. Hambuch, and John Parsch<br />

Molecular Evolution of Sex-Biased Genes in Drosophila .............................................................2130-2139<br />

Guy L. Odom, Jennifer L. Robichaux, and Prescott L. Deininger<br />

Predicting Mammalian SINE Subfamily Activity from A-tail Length ..............................................2140-2148<br />

Yoshinobu Igarashi, Kiyoko F. Aoki, Hiroshi Mamitsuka, Kei-ichi Kuma, and Minoru Kanehisa<br />

44


The Evolutionary Repertoires of the Eukaryotic-Type ABC Transporters in Terms of the Phylogeny<br />

of ATP-binding Domains in Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes .............................................................2149-2160<br />

Richard Bourgon, Mauro Delorenzi, Tobias Sargeant, Anthony N. Hod<strong>de</strong>r, Brendan S. Crabb, and<br />

Terence P. Speed<br />

The Serine Repeat Antigen (SERA) Gene Family Phylogeny in Plasmodium: The Impact of GC<br />

Content and Reconciliation of Gene and Species Trees ..............................................................2161-2171<br />

Laura Gómez-Valero, Amparo Latorre, and Francisco J. Silva<br />

The Evolutionary Fate of Nonfunctional DNA in the Bacterial Endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola 2172-2181<br />

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 12, December 2004.<br />

Editorials:<br />

William <strong>Mar</strong>tin<br />

Editor's Report for 2003 and January to June, 2004 ....................................................................2360-2363<br />

Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution (SMBE) Council and Business Meetings, 2004 State<br />

College, Pennsylvania, USA .........................................................................................................2364-2365<br />

Treasurer's Report for January 1, 2003–December 31, 2004 prepared by <strong>Mar</strong>ta L. Wayne,<br />

Treasurer ................................................................................................................................................2366<br />

MBE Reviewers: Volume 21 .........................................................................................................2367-2373<br />

Research Articles:<br />

Stuart A. Ralph, Bernardo J. Foth, Neil Hall, and Geoffrey I. McFad<strong>de</strong>n<br />

Evolutionary Pressures on Apicoplast Transit Pepti<strong>de</strong>s ...............................................................2183-2194<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k M. Tanaka, Noah A. Rosenberg, and Peter M. Small<br />

The Control of Copy Number of IS6110 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis ......................................2195-2201<br />

Ondrej Podlaha and Jianzhi Zhang<br />

Nonneutral Evolution of the Transcribed Pseudogene Makorin1-p1 in Mice ...............................2202-2209<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ko Premzl, Jill E. Gready, Lars S. Jermiin, Tatjana Simonic, and Jennifer A. <strong>Mar</strong>shall Graves<br />

Evolution of Vertebrate Genes Related to Prion and Shadoo Proteins—Clues from Comparative<br />

Genomic Analysis .........................................................................................................................2210-2231<br />

Carine Guillet-Clau<strong>de</strong>, Nathalie Isabel, Betty Pelgas, and Jean Bousquet<br />

The Evolutionary Implications of knox-I Gene Duplications in Conifers: Correlated Evi<strong>de</strong>nce from<br />

Phylogeny, Gene Mapping, and Analysis of Functional Divergence ............................................2232-2245<br />

Peter A. Fields and Daniel E. Houseman<br />

Decreases in Activation Energy and Substrate Affinity in Cold-Adapted A4-Lactate<br />

Dehydrogenase: Evi<strong>de</strong>nce from the Antarctic Notothenioid Fish Chaenocephalus aceratus ......2246-2255<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k S. Bulmer and Ross H. Crozier<br />

Duplication and Diversifying Selection Among Termite Antifungal Pepti<strong>de</strong>s ................................2256-2264<br />

Yong-Gang Yao, Qing-Peng Kong, Cheng-Ye Wang, Chun-Ling Zhu, and Ya-Ping Zhang<br />

Different Matrilineal Contributions to Genetic Structure of Ethnic Groups in the Silk Road Region in<br />

China .............................................................................................................................................2265-2280<br />

A. I. Kalmykova, D. A. Kwon, Ya. M. Rozovsky, N. Hueber, P. Capy, C. Maisonhaute, and V. A.<br />

Gvoz<strong>de</strong>v<br />

Selective Expansion of the Newly Evolved Genomic Variants of Retrotransposon 1731 in the<br />

Drosophila Genomes ....................................................................................................................2281-2289<br />

Yun-Huei Tzeng, Runsun Pan, and Wen-Hsiung Li<br />

Comparison of Three Methods for Estimating Rates of Synonymous and Nonsynonymous<br />

Nucleoti<strong>de</strong> Substitutions ...............................................................................................................2290-2298<br />

J. Pecon-Slattery, A. J. Pearks Wilkerson, W. J. Murphy, and S. J. O'Brien<br />

Phylogenetic Assessment of Introns and SINEs Within the Y Chromosome Using the Cat Family<br />

Felidae As a Species Tree ............................................................................................................2299-2309<br />

Daniel E. Neafsey, Justin P. Blumenstiel, and Daniel L. Hartl<br />

Different Regulatory Mechanisms Un<strong>de</strong>rlie Similar Transposable Element Profiles in Pufferfish<br />

and Fruitflies ..................................................................................................................................2310-2318<br />

Gwenaël Piganeau, Michael Gardner, and Adam Eyre-Walker<br />

A Broad Survey of Recombination in Animal Mitochondria ..........................................................2319-2325<br />

Deena Schmidt and Rick Durrett<br />

Adaptive Evolution Drives the Diversification of Zinc-Finger Binding Domains ............................2326-2339<br />

David A. Walsh, Eric Bapteste, Masahiro Kamekura, and W. Ford Doolittle<br />

45


Evolution of the RNA Polymerase B' Subunit Gene (rpoB') in Halobacteriales: a Complementary<br />

Molecular <strong>Mar</strong>ker to the SSU rRNA Gene ....................................................................................2340-2351<br />

Yoshiyuki Suzuki<br />

Three-Dimensional Window Analysis for Detecting Positive Selection at Structural Regions of<br />

Proteins .........................................................................................................................................2352-2359<br />

Errata:<br />

Shin-Han Shiu and Wen-Hsiung Li<br />

Origins, Lineage-Specific Expansions, and Multiple Losses of Tyrosine Kinases in Eukaryotes 2374-2375<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON:<br />

Vol. 117, No. 3, 7 December 2004.<br />

A review of the North American subspecies of the Great Blue Heron (Ar<strong>de</strong>a herodias). Robert W.<br />

Dickerman....................................................................................................................................... 242–250.<br />

A new species of Microgale (Lipotyphla: Tenrecidae: Oryzorictinae) from the Forêt <strong>de</strong>s Mikea of<br />

southwestern Madagascar. Steven M. Goodman and Voahangy Soarimalala.............................. 251–265.<br />

Designation of the type species of Musaraneus Pomel, 1848 (Mammalia: Soricomorpha:<br />

Soricidae). Neal Woodman............................................................................................................. 266–270.<br />

The mammals of Palawan Island, Philippines. Jacob A. Esselstyn, Peter Widmann, and Lawrence<br />

R. Heaney....................................................................................................................................... 271–302.<br />

A new species of Tropidonophis (Serpentes: Colubridae: Natricinae) from the D’Entrecasteaux<br />

Islands, Papua New Guinea. Fred Kraus and Allen Allison............................................................ 303–310.<br />

A new species of snake of the genus Omoadiphas (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae) from the<br />

Cordillera Nombre <strong>de</strong> Dios in northern Honduras. James R. McCranie and Franklin E. Castañeda 311–316.<br />

A new species of Kolpotocheirodon (Teleostei: Characidae: Cheirodontinae: Compsurini) from<br />

Bahia, northeastern Brazil, with a new diagnosis of the genus. Luiz R. Malabarba, Flávio C. T.<br />

Lima, and Stanley H. Weitzman...................................................................................................... 317–329.<br />

Astyanax biotae, a new species of stream fish from the Rio Paranapanema basin, upper Rio<br />

Paraná system, southeastern Brazil (Ostariophysi: Characiformes: Characidae). Ricardo M. C.<br />

Castro and Richard P. Vari............................................................................................................. 330–338.<br />

Tetragonopterus lemniscatus (Characiformes: Characidae), a new species from the Corantijn<br />

River basin in Suriname. Ricardo C. Benine, Gabriela Zanon Pelição, and Richard P. Vari......... 339–345.<br />

Longipalpa saltatrix, a new genus and species of the meiofaunal family Nerillidae (Annelida:<br />

Polychaeta) from an anchihaline cave in Bermuda. Katrine Worsaae, Wolfgang Sterrer, and<br />

Thomas M. Iliffe .............................................................................................................................. 346–362.<br />

Neostrengeria lemaitrei, a new species of freshwater crab from Colombia (Crustacea: Decapoda:<br />

Pseudothelphusidae), and the vertical distribution of the genus. <strong>Mar</strong>tha R. Campos.................... 363–367.<br />

A new species of Agostocaris (Cari<strong>de</strong>a: Agostocarididae) from Acklins Island, Bahamas.<br />

Fernando Alvarez, José Luis Villalobos, and Thomas M. Iliffe....................................................... 368–376.<br />

A new species of cari<strong>de</strong>an shrimp of the family Stylodactylidae from the eastern Pacific Ocean.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>y K. Wicksten and Joel W. <strong>Mar</strong>tin............................................................................................. 377–384.<br />

A new pedunculate barnacle (Cirripedia: Heteralepadidae) from the Northwest Atlantic. L. Buhl-<br />

Mortensen and W. A. Newman....................................................................................................... 385–397.<br />

Two new species of seven-spined Bathyconchoecia from the North Atlantic and Indian oceans<br />

(Crustacea: Ostracoda: Halocypridae). Louis S. Kornicker and J. A. Rudjakov............................. 398–407.<br />

The hermaphroditic sea anemone Anthopleura atodai n. sp. (Anthozoa: Actiniaria: Actiniidae) from<br />

Japan, with a re<strong>de</strong>scription of A. hermaphroditica. Kensuke Yanagi and <strong>Mar</strong>ymegan Daly.......... 408–422.<br />

New species and new combinations in Rhysolepis (Heliantheae: Asteraceae). Harold Robinson<br />

and Abigail J. Moore....................................................................................................................... 423–446.<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON:<br />

Vol. 117, No. 4, 20 December 2004.<br />

Studies on western Atlantic Octocorallia (Coelenterata: Anthozoa). Part 5: The genera Plumarella<br />

Gray, 1870; Acanthoprimnoa, n. gen.; and Candi<strong>de</strong>lla Bayer, 1954. Stephen D. Cairns and<br />

Fre<strong>de</strong>rick M. Bayer.......................................................................................................................... 447–487.<br />

A new species of the sea anemone Megalactis (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Actiniaria: Actino<strong>de</strong>ndridae)<br />

from Taiwan and <strong>de</strong>signation of a neotype for the type species of the genus. Adorian Ar<strong>de</strong>lean<br />

and Daphne Gail Fautin.................................................................................................................. 488–504.<br />

46


A new genus and new species of crab of the family Xanthidae MacLeay, 1838 (Crustacea:<br />

Decapoda: Brachyura) from the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. Ana Rosa Vázquez-Ba<strong>de</strong>r and<br />

Adolfo Gracia.................................................................................................................................. 505–513.<br />

A new anchialine shrimp of the genus Procaris (Crustacea: Decapoda: Procarididae) from the<br />

Yucatan Peninsula. Richard v. Sternberg and <strong>Mar</strong>ilyn Schotte...................................................... 514–522.<br />

Macrobrachium patheinense, a new species of freshwater prawn (Crustacea: Decapoda:<br />

Palaemonidae) from Myanmar. Hla Phone and Hiroshi Suzuki..................................................... 523–528.<br />

A new species of Enhydrosoma Boeck, 1872 (Copepoda: Harpacticoida: Cletodidae) from the<br />

Eastern Tropical Pacific. Samuel Gómez....................................................................................... 529–540.<br />

New record of Ophiosyzygus disacanthus Clark, 1911 (Echino<strong>de</strong>rmata: Ophiuroi<strong>de</strong>a:<br />

Ophiomyxidae) in the Caribbean Sea. Giomar Helena Borrero-Pérez and Milena Benavi<strong>de</strong>s-<br />

Serrato ............................................................................................................................................ 541–544.<br />

Sunagocia sainsburyi, a new flathead fish (Scorpaeniformes: Platycephalidae) from northwestern<br />

Australia. Leslie W. Knapp and Hisashi Imamura........................................................................... 545–550.<br />

A new species of Nannocharax (Characiformes: Distichodontidae) from Cameroon, with the<br />

<strong>de</strong>scription of contact organs and breeding tubercles in the genus. Richard P. Vari and Carl J.<br />

Ferraris Jr........................................................................................................................................ 551–563.<br />

Rhamdia guasarensis (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae), a new species of cave catfish from the Sierra<br />

<strong>de</strong> Perijá, northwestern Venezuela. Carlos DoNascimiento, Francisco Provenzano, and John G.<br />

Lundberg......................................................................................................................................... 564–574.<br />

Taxonomic review of the fossil Procellariidae (Aves: Procellariiformes) <strong>de</strong>scribed from Bermuda by<br />

R. W. Shufeldt. Storrs L. Olson....................................................................................................... 575–581.<br />

Revision of the genus Squamigera (Insecta: Zygentoma: Nicoletiidae) with <strong>de</strong>scriptions of two new<br />

species. Luis Espinasa and Bethany Burnham.............................................................................. 582–593.<br />

TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 6, November 2004.<br />

Physiological Significance of the Weigh-In during Live-Release Angling Tournaments for<br />

Largemouth Bass<br />

Cory D. Suski, Shaun S. Killen, Steven. J. Cooke, James D. Kieffer, David P. Philipp and Bruce L.<br />

Tufts .......................................................................................................................................................1291<br />

Behavioral Assumptions in Mo<strong>de</strong>ls of Fish Movement and Their Influence on Population Dynamics<br />

Robert Humston, Donald B. Olson and Jerald S. Ault ...........................................................................1304<br />

Changes in Prairie Stream Fish Assemblages Restricted to Isolated Streambed<br />

PoolsKenneth G. Ostrand and Gene R. Wil<strong>de</strong> ......................................................................................1329<br />

Growth Variation, Settlement, and Spawning of Gray Snapper across a Latitudinal Gradient<br />

Kelly Denit and Su Sponaugle ...............................................................................................................1339<br />

Enhancing Productive Capacity in the Canadian Arctic: Assessing the Effectiveness of Instream<br />

Habitat Structures in Habitat Compensation<br />

Nicholas E. Jones and William M. Tonn ................................................................................................1356<br />

Do Predators Influence the Distribution of Age-0 Kokanee in a Colorado Reservoir?<br />

Jill M. Hardiman, Brett M. Johnson and Patrick J. <strong>Mar</strong>tinez ..................................................................1366<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of a Lunar Gravitation Cue on Timing of Estuarine Entry by Pacific Salmon Smolts<br />

Paul DeVries, Fred Goetz, Kurt Fresh and David Seiler .......................................................................1379<br />

The Influence of Climate on the Stock and Recruitment of Pink and Sockeye Salmon from the<br />

Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada<br />

R. J. Beamish, J. T. Schnute, A. J. Cass, C. M. Neville and R. M. Sweeting ........................................1396<br />

Hydrosystem, Dam, and Reservoir Passage Rates of Adult Chinook Salmon and Steelhead in the<br />

Columbia and Snake Rivers<br />

Matthew L. Keefer, Christopher A. Peery, Theodore C. Bjornn, Michael A. Jepson and Lowell C.<br />

Stuehrenberg .........................................................................................................................................1413<br />

Restoring Productivity of Salmon-Based Food Webs: Contrasting Effects of Salmon Carcass and<br />

Salmon Carcass Analog Additions on Stream-Resi<strong>de</strong>nt Salmonids<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k S. Wipfli, John P. Hudson and John P. Caouette .........................................................................1440<br />

Migration of Atlantic Salmon Postsmolts in Relation to Habitat Use in a Coastal System<br />

Gilles L. Lacroix, Paul McCurdy and Derek Knox ..................................................................................1455<br />

An Evaluation of the Use of Critical Swimming Speed for Determination of Culvert Water Velocity<br />

Criteria for Smallmouth Bass<br />

47


Stephan Peake ......................................................................................................................................1472<br />

Habitat Factors Affecting Sockeye Salmon Redd Site Selection in Off-Channel Ponds of a River<br />

Floodplain<br />

Julie L. Hall and Robert C. Wissmar ......................................................................................................1480<br />

A Biointegrity In<strong>de</strong>x (IBI) for Coldwater Streams of Western Oregon and Washington<br />

Robert M. Hughes, Shay Howlin and Philip R. Kaufmann .....................................................................1497<br />

A Comparison of the Suitability of Alizarin Red S and Calcein for Inducing a Nonlethally<br />

Detectable <strong>Mar</strong>k in Juvenile Guppies<br />

Farrah Bashey .......................................................................................................................................1516<br />

Comparison of Bluegill Consumption Rates by Largemouth Bass and Sunshine Bass in Structured<br />

and Nonstructured Artificial Environments<br />

Christopher W. Hickey and Christopher C. Kohler ................................................................................1524<br />

Salmonids on the Fringe: Abundance, Species Composition, and Habitat Use of Salmonids in<br />

High-Gradient Headwater Streams, Southeast Alaska<br />

M. D. Bryant, N. D. Zymonas and B. E. Wright ......................................................................................1529<br />

Electrofishing and Its Harmful Effects on Fish<br />

Robert F. Carline ....................................................................................................................................1539<br />

Regime Shifts in Lake Ecosystems: Pattern and Variation<br />

Edward Mills............................................................................................................................................1540<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 4, August 2004.<br />

Ecohydrology as a new tool for sustainable management of estuaries and coastal waters .........235 - 276<br />

E. Wolanski, L.A. Boorman, L. Chícharo, et al.<br />

Fine sediment trapping in two mangrove-fringed estuaries exposed to contrasting land-use<br />

intensity, Palau, Micronesia ...........................................................................................................277 - 283<br />

S. Victor, Y. Golbuu, E. Wolanski, et al.<br />

The role of wetlands in wildlife migration in the Tarangire ecosystem, Tanzania .........................285 - 299<br />

Emmanuel Gereta, Godwell Elias Ole Meing’ataki, Simon Mduma, et al.<br />

The influence of wetlands in regulating water quality in the Seronera River, Serengeti National<br />

Park, Tanzania ...............................................................................................................................301 - 307<br />

Emmanuel Gereta, Ephraim Mwangomo, Eric Wolanski<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 5, October 2004.<br />

Biochemical properties of soils of undisturbed and disturbed mangrove forests of South Andaman<br />

(India) .............................................................................................................................................309 - 320<br />

R. Dinesh, S. G. Chaudhuri, A. N. Ganeshamurthy, et al.<br />

An approach to optimal wetland mitigation using mathematical programming and geographic<br />

information system based wetland function estimation .................................................................321 - 331<br />

J. P. Roise, K. W. Gainey, T. H. Shear<br />

Consolidation and volumetric soil-water content of salt marsh soils following habitat modification<br />

for mosquito control .......................................................................................................................333 - 342<br />

M. J. Breitfuss and R. M. Connolly<br />

Age-specific seasonal storage dynamics ofPhragmites australis rhizomes: a preliminary study ..343 - 351<br />

Shiromi Karunaratne, Takashi Asaeda, Kentaro Yutani<br />

Colour-based estimation of rhizome age in Phragmites australis .................................................353 - 363<br />

Shiromi Karunaratne, Takashi Asaeda, Satoru Toyooka<br />

Association between phosphorus and suspen<strong>de</strong>d solids in an Evergla<strong>de</strong>s treatment wetland<br />

dominated by submersed aquatic vegetation ................................................................................365 - 375<br />

M. Farve, W. Harris, F. Dierberg, et al.<br />

Density-habitat relationships of mangrove creek fishes within the southeastern saline Evergla<strong>de</strong>s<br />

(USA), with reference to managed freshwater releases ................................................................377 - 394<br />

Craig H. Faunce, Joseph E. Serafy, Jerome J. Lorenz<br />

Waterbird herbivory on a newly created wetland complex: potential implications for site<br />

management and habitat creation .................................................................................................395 - 408<br />

M. L. Yallop, M. J. O’Connell, R. Bullock<br />

Relationships between National Wetlands Inventory maps and hydrophytic vegetation in Florida 409 - 418<br />

48


James P. Shepard, Hesham Abd-El Monsef, Loukas G. Arvanitis<br />

Differences in carbon fluxes between forested and cultivated micronesian tropical peatlands ....419 - 427<br />

Rodney A. Chimner and Katherine C. Ewel<br />

Ditches and canals in management of fens: opportunity or risk? A case study in the Drömling<br />

Natural Park, Germany ..................................................................................................................429 - 445<br />

Uta Langheinrich, Sabine Tischew, Richard M. Gersberg, et al.<br />

Changes in avian species composition following surface mining and reclamation along a riparian<br />

forest corridor in southern Indiana .................................................................................................447 - 457<br />

M. J. Lacki, J. L. Fitzgerald, J. W. Hummer<br />

Water pollution control by aquatic vegetation of treatment wetlands ............................................459 - 471<br />

Arthur F. M. Meuleman, Bou<strong>de</strong>wijn Beltman, Robbert A. Scheffer<br />

Human impacts and the status of water quality in the Bundala RAMSAR wetland lagoon system in<br />

Southern Sri Lanka ........................................................................................................................473 - 482<br />

S. C. Piyankarage, A. P. Mallawatantri, Y. Matsuno, et al.<br />

Spatial and temporal changes in salt marsh distribution in the Dee estuary, NW England,<br />

<strong>de</strong>termined from aerial photographs ..............................................................................................483 - 498<br />

J. M. Huckle, R. H. <strong>Mar</strong>rs, J. A. Potter<br />

Focusing management needs at the sub-catchment level via assessments of change in the cover<br />

of estuarine vegetation, Port Hacking, NSW, Australia .................................................................499 - 518<br />

R. J. Williams and A. J. Meehan<br />

Sensitivity analysis of transportation corridor location in wetland areas: A multiobjective<br />

programming and GIS approach ...................................................................................................519 - 529<br />

J. P. Roise, T. H. Shear, J. V. Bianco<br />

The distribution and state of mangroves along the coast of Transkei, Eastern Cape Province,<br />

South Africa ....................................................................................................................................531 - 541<br />

J. B. Adams, B. M. Colloty, G. C. Bate<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 6, December 2004.<br />

Neotropical wetlands: Building links among wetland scientists .....................................................543 - 546<br />

J. F. Gottgens and R. H. Fortney<br />

Features and conservation of the Brazilian Pantanal wetland .......................................................547 - 552<br />

Arnildo Pott and Vali Joana Pott<br />

New challenges in the management of the Brazilian Pantanal and catchment area ....................553 - 561<br />

Carolina Joana da Silva and Pierre Girard<br />

Landsat TM inventory and assessment of waterbird habitat in the southern altiplano of South<br />

America ..........................................................................................................................................563 - 573<br />

Terence P. Boyle, Sandra M. Caziani, Robert G. Waltermire<br />

Aquatic plant community composition and distribution along an inundation gradient at two<br />

ecologically-distinct sites in the Pantanal region of Brazil .............................................................575 - 585<br />

Ronald H. Fortney, Michael Benedict, Johan F. Gottgens, et al.<br />

Neotropical wetlands: New instruments in ecosystem management ............................................587 - 596<br />

Steven A. Loiselle, Simone Bastianoni, Luca Bracchini, et al.<br />

Status of knowledge, ongoing research, and research needs in Amazonian wetlands ................597 - 609<br />

W. J. Junk and M. T. F. Pieda<strong>de</strong><br />

49

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