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SEPTIEMBRE DE 2004 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología

SEPTIEMBRE DE 2004 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología

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INTRODUCCIÓN<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

correo respectivas.<br />

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

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

Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />

Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.


LIBROS<br />

BAUER, RAYMOND, T., <strong>2004</strong>. Remarkable shrimps. Adaptations and natural<br />

history of<br />

the Cari<strong>de</strong>ans. U.S.A.: The University of Oklahoma Press: 282 p. (Volume 7 in<br />

the Animal Natural History Series).<br />

BULLARD, STEPHAN G., 2003. Larvae of Anomuran and Brachyuran crabs<br />

of North<br />

Carolina. A gui<strong>de</strong> to the <strong>de</strong>scribed larval stages of Anomuran (families<br />

Porcellanidae), Albuneidae, and Hippidae) and Brachyuran crabs of North<br />

Carolina, U.S.A.—Lei<strong>de</strong>n, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill Aca<strong>de</strong>mic<br />

Publishers: 137 p. (Crustaceana Monographs, 1).<br />

CARRERA GONZÁLEZ, EDUARDO Y GABRIELA <strong>DE</strong> LA FUENTE <strong>DE</strong> LEÓN,<br />

2003. Inventario y Clasificación <strong>de</strong> Humedales en México.<br />

Parte I. – México: DUMAC (Ducks Unlimited <strong>de</strong> México, A.C.): 239 p.<br />

FALKOWSKI, PAUL G. AND AVRIL D. WOODHEAD, 1992. Primary<br />

Productivity and<br />

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

LAST, WILLIAM M. AND JOHN S. SMOL, 2001. Tracking Environmental<br />

Change Using<br />

Lake Sediments. Volume 1: Basin analysis, coring, and chronological<br />

techniques.—Dordrecht: Kluwer Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Publishers: 548 p.<br />

LAST, WILLIAM M. AND JOHN S. SMOL, 2001. Tracking Environmental<br />

Change Using<br />

Lake Sediments. Volume 2: Physical and Geochemical Methods.—Dordrecht:<br />

Kluwer Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Publishers: 504 p.<br />

MÛLLER, WERNER E.G. ED., 2003. Sponges (Porifera). – Berlín: Springer-<br />

Verlag: 258<br />

p.<br />

SAR, EUGENIA A., MARTHA E. FERRARIO AND BEATRIZ REGUERA,<br />

EDS., 2002.<br />

Floraciones algales nocivas en el Cono Sur Americano.—Madrid: <strong>Instituto</strong><br />

Español <strong>de</strong> Oceanografía: 311 p.<br />

SMOL, JOHN P., H. JOHN B. BIRKS AND WILLIAM M. LAST, 2001. Tracking<br />

Environmental Change Using Lake Sediments. Volume 4: Zoological<br />

Indicators.—Dordrecht: Kluwer Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Publishers: 217 p.<br />

3


SHUSTER, STEPHEN M. AND MICHAEL J. WA<strong>DE</strong>, 2003. Mating Systems<br />

and<br />

Strategies.—Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press: 533 p.<br />

TESIS<br />

LEÓN <strong>DE</strong>NIZ, LORENA VIOLETA, 2003. Aislamiento, purificación,<br />

i<strong>de</strong>ntificación y<br />

evaluación <strong>de</strong> la actividad antimicrobiana <strong>de</strong> un compuesto <strong>de</strong> Aplysina<br />

gerardogreeni, Gómez y Bakus 1992 (Porifera: Demospongia). Tesis <strong>de</strong><br />

Maestría. <strong>Instituto</strong> Politécnico Nacional, Centro Interdisciplinario <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong><br />

<strong>Mar</strong>inas (CICIMAR), Departamento <strong>de</strong> Desarrollo <strong>de</strong> Tecnologías, 77 p.<br />

PIÑA VAL<strong>DE</strong>Z, PABLO, <strong>2004</strong>. Balance energético <strong>de</strong> los estadios larvarios <strong>de</strong><br />

camarón blanco (Litopenaeus vannamei, BOONE), con la dieta tradicional y<br />

con otra no tradicional. Universidad Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Nayarit. Subdirección <strong>de</strong><br />

Posgrado e Investigación. Posgrado Interinstitucional en <strong>Ciencias</strong> Pecuarias,<br />

113 p.<br />

ROMERO BAÑUELOS, CARLOS ALBERTO, 2003. Hidrología y metales<br />

pesados en la<br />

materia particulada suspendida <strong>de</strong>l agua superficial <strong>de</strong> la porción sur <strong>de</strong> la<br />

Bahía <strong>de</strong> La Paz, B.C.S., México, 100 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

AQUATIC ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 38, No. 2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

BOLETÍN <strong>DE</strong>L INSTITUTO OCEANOGRÁFICO <strong>DE</strong> VENEZUELA:<br />

Vol. 42, No. 1-2, 2003.<br />

BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 3, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 74, No. 3, May <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 08, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

¿CÓMO VEZ?:<br />

No. 69, agosto <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

4


COPEIA:<br />

No. 3, August 20, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 9, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2003.<br />

Vol. 9, No. 3, May 2003.<br />

Vol. 9, No. 4, July 2003.<br />

Vol. 10, No. 4, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 45, No. 8, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 46, No. 1, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 46, No. 2, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 132, No. 2, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 23, No. 6, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 23, No. 9, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 8, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ESTUARIES:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

FARO, EL:<br />

No. 41, agosto 5 <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 42, septiembre 2 <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

FISH AND FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 3, No. 4, December 2002.<br />

FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 29, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 1, January <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 102, No. 2, April <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 102, No. 3, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GACETA UNAM:<br />

No. 3, 746, 9 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3,747, 13 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

5


No. 3,748, 20 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3,749, 23 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3,750, 27 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 6, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GEONOTICIAS:<br />

No. 88, mayo <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 89, mayo <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 3, May 2003.<br />

Vol. 12, No. 5, September 2003.<br />

Vol. 12, No. 6, November 2003.<br />

Vol. 13, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS:<br />

No. 25, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

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

No. 275, 18 <strong>de</strong> agosto <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 276, 8 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

IAMSLIC NEWSLETTER:<br />

No. 92, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 5, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

INFOPESCA JOURNAL:<br />

No. 1, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 3, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 40, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

6


JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 52, No. 2, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 274, June 24, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 275, July 14, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 276, August 2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

NEW SCIENTIST:<br />

Vol. 183, No. 2459, 7 August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 183, No. 2460, 14 August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

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

No. 82, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

PANORAMA ACUÍCOLA:<br />

Vol. 6, No. 5, julio-agosto <strong>de</strong> 2001.<br />

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

RESULTS:<br />

Vol. 182, Scientific Results, Sites 1126-1134, 8 October –7 December<br />

1998.<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA MARITIMA:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 1-2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

U2000. CRÓNICA <strong>DE</strong> LA EDUCACION SUPERIOR:<br />

No. 427, 16 <strong>de</strong> agosto <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 430, 6 <strong>de</strong> septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 3, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

7


PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

AQUATIC ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 38, No. 2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Lake Myvatn and the River Laxá: An introduction.................................................................................... 111<br />

Árni Einarsson<br />

Groundwater in the Lake Myvatn area, northern Iceland: Chemistry, origin and<br />

interaction................................................................................................................................................. 115<br />

Hrefna Kristmannsdóttir, Halldór Ármannsson<br />

Climate and climatic variability at Lake Myvatn........................................................................................ 129<br />

Halldór Björnsson, Trausti Jónsson<br />

Lake circulation and sediment transport in Lake Myvatn......................................................................... 145<br />

Snorri Páll Kjaran, Sigurdur Lárus Hólm, Eric Matthew Myer<br />

Chemical composition of interstitial water and diffusive fluxes within the diatomaceous<br />

sediment in Lake Myvatn, Iceland............................................................................................................ 163<br />

Sigurdur Reynir Gíslason, Eydís Salome Eiríksdóttir, Jón Sigurdur Ólafsson<br />

Benthic oxygen flux in the highly productive subarctic Lake Myvatn, Iceland: In situ<br />

benthic flux chamber study....................................................................................................................... 177<br />

Ingunn <strong>Mar</strong>ía Thorbergsdóttir, Sigurdur Reynir Gíslason, Haraldur R. Ingvason, Árni<br />

Einarsson<br />

Internal loading of nutrients and certain metals in the shallow eutrophic Lake Myvatn,<br />

Iceland...................................................................................................................................................... 191<br />

Ingunn <strong>Mar</strong>ía Thorbergsdóttir, Sigurdur Reynir Gíslason<br />

Population fluctuations of chironomid and simuliid Diptera at Myvatn in 1977–1996.............................. 209<br />

Arnthor Gardarsson, Árni Einarsson, Gísli Már Gíslason, Thóora Hrafnsdóttir, Haraldur<br />

R. Ingvason, Erlendur Jónsson, Jón S. Ólafsson<br />

Alteration of biogenic structure and physical properties by tube-building chironomid<br />

larvae in cohesive sediments................................................................................................................... 219<br />

Jón S. Ólafsson, David M. Paterson<br />

Food selection of Tanytarsus gracilentus larvae (Diptera: Chironomidae): An analysis<br />

of instars and cohorts............................................................................................................................. 231-<br />

Haraldur R. Ingvason, Jón S. Ólafsson, Arnthor Gardarsson<br />

Dinoflagellate cysts in recent marine sediments from Scapa Flow, Orkney, Scotland<br />

Joyce, Linda B.......................................................................................................................................... 173<br />

Dinoflagellate cysts in recent marine sediments from the east coast of Russia<br />

Orlova, Tatiana Yu. - Morozova, Tatiana V. - Gribble, Kristin E. - Kulis, David M. -<br />

An<strong>de</strong>rson, Donald M................................................................................................................................. 184<br />

Variation in chemical <strong>de</strong>fenses against herbivory in southwestern Atlantic<br />

Stypopodium zonale (Phaeophyta)<br />

Pereira, Renato C. - Soares, Angélica R. - Teixeira, Valéria L. - Villaça, Roberto -<br />

Gama, Bernardo A.P. da.......................................................................................................................... 202<br />

Seasonal variations in fatty acid composition of Caulerpa taxifolia (M. Vahl.) C. Ag. in<br />

the northern Adriatic Sea (Malinska, Croatia)<br />

Ivea, Ljiljana - Blaina, <strong>Mar</strong>ia - Naj<strong>de</strong>k, Mirjana......................................................................................... 209<br />

Chemical composition and biological activity of the brackish-water green alga<br />

Cladophora rivularis (L.) Hoek<br />

Kamenarska, Zornitsa - Stefanov, Kamen - Dimitrova-Konaklieva, Stefka - Naj<strong>de</strong>nski,<br />

Hristo - Tsvetkova, Iva - Popov, Simeon.................................................................................................. 215<br />

Ultrastructure of tetrasporogenesis in the red alga Rhodymenia californica var.<br />

attenuata (Rhodymeniaceae, Rhodymeniales, Rhodophyta)<br />

Delivopoulos, Stylianos G......................................................................................................................... 222<br />

8


Organisation of the microtubular cytoskeleton in protoplasts from Palmaria palmata<br />

(Palmariales, Rhodophyta)<br />

Gall, Line Le - Rusig, Anne-<strong>Mar</strong>ie - Cosson, Joël.................................................................................... 231<br />

Thalassiosira fryxelliae nov. spec. (Bacillariophyceae) from Argentinian coastal waters<br />

Sunesen, Inés - Sar, Eugenia A............................................................................................................... 238<br />

Short-term uptake of dissolved organic nitrogen by an axenic strain of Ulva pertusa<br />

(Chlorophyceae) using [15]N isotope measurements<br />

Tarutani, Kenji - Niimura, Yoko - Uchida, Takuji...................................................................................... 248<br />

The occurrence of Boodleopsis vaucherioi<strong>de</strong>a Cal<strong>de</strong>rón-Sáenz et Schnetter<br />

(Udoteaceae, Chlorophyta) in Brazil<br />

Cassano, Valéria - Brito, Luciana V.R. <strong>de</strong> - Széchy, <strong>Mar</strong>ia Teresa M. <strong>de</strong>............................................... 251<br />

First record of Undaria pinnatifida (Harvey) Suringar (Laminariales, Phaeophyta) on<br />

the Pacific coast of Mexico<br />

Aguilar-Rosas, Raúl - Aguilar-Rosas, Luis Ernesto - ávila-Serrano, Guillermo -<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>cos-Ramírez, Roberto........................................................................................................................ 255<br />

World atlas of seagrasses........................................................................................................................ 259<br />

The genus Dictyota (Dictyotales, Phaeophyta) in the Indian Ocean........................................................ 261<br />

BOLETÍN <strong>DE</strong>L INSTITUTO OCEANOGRÁFICO <strong>DE</strong> VENEZUELA:<br />

Vol. 42, No. 1-2, 2003.<br />

BONILLA, J., S. ARANDA, C. RAMIREZ, J. MOYA & A. MARQUEZ. Calidad <strong>de</strong> los<br />

sedimentos superficiales <strong>de</strong> la Ensenada Gran<strong>de</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Obispo, Estado Sucre -<br />

Venezuela......................................................................................................................................................3<br />

PEREZ, J., S. SALAZAR, C. ALFONSI & L. Ruiz. Ictiofauna <strong>de</strong>l Rio Manzanares: a<br />

dos <strong>de</strong>cadas <strong>de</strong> la introducci6n <strong>de</strong> la tilapia negra Oreochromis mossambicus<br />

(Pisces:Cichlidae)........................................................................................................................................29<br />

BARRIOS, J. E., B. MARQUEZ & M. JIMENEZ. Macroalgas asociadas a Rhizophora<br />

mangle L. en el Golfo <strong>de</strong> Santa Fe, Estado Sucre, Venezuela...................................................................37<br />

BONILLA, J., J. MOYA & A. QUINTERO. Contenido org,inico y parametros reductores<br />

<strong>de</strong> sedimentos <strong>de</strong>l Archipielago Los Roques, Venezuela...........................................................................47<br />

BORRERO-PEREZ, G., M. BENAVI<strong>DE</strong>S-SERRATO, O.SOLANO & G.NAVAS.<br />

Holothuroi<strong>de</strong>os (Echino<strong>de</strong>rmata: Holothuroi<strong>de</strong>a) recolectados en el talud continental<br />

superior <strong>de</strong>l Caribe colombiano...................................................................................................................65<br />

MAGO GUEVARA, Y. & O. CHINCHILLA MARTINEZ. Un nuevo registro y una nueva<br />

especie <strong>de</strong>l genero Opecoelina MANTER, 1934 (Digenea: Opecoelida) halladas en<br />

peces marinos <strong>de</strong>l nororiente <strong>de</strong> Venezuela...............................................................................................87<br />

BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 3, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Beyond band-aids in fisheries management: fixing world fisheries<br />

Hilborn, R.; Punt, A. E.; Orensanz, J.................................................................................................493-508<br />

Genetically engineered salmon, ecological risk, and environmental policy<br />

Kelso, D. D. T....................................................................................................................................509-528<br />

Ecosystem tra<strong>de</strong>-offs in managing New England fisheries<br />

Brodziak, J. K. T.; Mace, P. M.; Overholtz, W. J.; Rago, P. J.................................................................. 548<br />

Tra<strong>de</strong>-offs in ecosystem-scale optimization of fisheries management policies<br />

Christensen, V.; Walters, C. J.......................................................................................................... 549-562<br />

Getting the right answer from the wrong mo<strong>de</strong>l: evaluating the sensitivity of<br />

multispecies fisheries advice to uncertain species interactions<br />

Essington, T. E................................................................................................................................. 563-582<br />

Managing fisheries effects on marine food webs in Antarctica: tra<strong>de</strong>-offs among<br />

harvest strategies, monitoring, and assessment in achieving conservation objectives<br />

Constable, A. J................................................................................................................................. 583-606<br />

9


Ecological and economic components of alternative fishing methods to reduce bycatch<br />

of marlin in a tropical pelagic ecosystem<br />

Kitchell, J. F.; Kaplan, I. C.; Cox, S. P.; <strong>Mar</strong>tell, S. J. D.; Essington, T. E.; Boggs, C.<br />

H.; Walters, C. J................................................................................................................................ 607-620<br />

Complex trophic interactions in kelp forest ecosystems<br />

Estes, J. A.; Danner, E. M.; Doak, D. F.; Konar, B.; Springer, A. M.; Steinberg, P. D.;<br />

Tinker, M. T.; Williams, T. M............................................................................................................. 621-638<br />

Searching for ecosystem reality-terms and concepts<br />

Alverson, D. L................................................................................................................................... 639-652<br />

Including species interactions in the <strong>de</strong>sign and evaluation of marine reserves: some<br />

insights from a predator-prey mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />

Micheli, F.; Amarasekare, P.; Bascompte, J.; Gerber, L. R. ............................................................ 653-670<br />

Lake Superior ecosystem, 1929-1998: simulating alternative hypotheses for<br />

recruitment failure of lake herring (Coregonus artedi)<br />

Cox, S. P.; Kitchell, J. F.................................................................................................................... 671-684<br />

Can we reach agreement on a standardized approach to ecosystem-based fishery<br />

management?<br />

Babcock, E. A.; Pikitch, E. K............................................................................................................. 685-692<br />

Transition from low to high data richness: an experiment in ecosystem-based fishery<br />

management from California<br />

Kaufman, L.; Heneman, B.; Barnes, J. T.; Fujita, R......................................................................... 693-708<br />

Performance indices that facilitate informed, value-driven <strong>de</strong>cision making in fisheries<br />

management<br />

Nowlis, J. S....................................................................................................................................... 709-726<br />

Toward ecosystem-based extraction policies for Prince William Sound, Alaska:<br />

integrating conflicting objectives and rebuilding pinnipeds<br />

Okey, T. A.; Wright, B. A. ..................................................................................................................727-748<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 74, No. 3, May <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Esociform Phylogeny. J. Andrés López, Wei-Jen Chen, and Guillermo Ortí.................................. 449–464.<br />

Growth, Survival, and Reproduction in a Northern Illinois Population of the Plains<br />

Gartersnake, Thamnophis radix. Kristin M. Stanford and Richard B. King..................................... 465–478.<br />

Photophase and Illumination Effects on the Swimming Performance and Behavior of<br />

Five California Estuarine Fishes. Paciencia S. Young, Christina Swanson, and Joseph<br />

J. Cech Jr......................................................................................................................................... 479–487.<br />

Potential Interference Competition between a Patchily Distributed Salaman<strong>de</strong>r<br />

(Plethodon petraeus) and a Sympatric Congener (Plethodon glutinosus). Jeremy L.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>shall, Carlos D. Camp, and Robert G. Jaeger........................................................................... 488–495.<br />

Phylogenetic Analysis and Re<strong>de</strong>scription of the Genus Henochilus (Characiformes:<br />

Characidae). Ricardo M. C. Castro, Richard P. Vari, Fábio Vieira, and Claudio Oliveira............... 496–506.<br />

Three New Species of Narrow-Mouth Frogs (Genus: Microhyla) from Indochina, with<br />

Comments on Microhyla annamensis and Microhyla palmipes. Raoul H. Bain and<br />

Nguyen Quang Truong.................................................................................................................... 507–524.<br />

Re<strong>de</strong>scription of Gymnotus coatesi (Gymnotiformes, Gymnotidae): A Rare Species of<br />

Electric Fish from the Lowland Amazon Basin, with Descriptions of Osteology, Electric<br />

Signals, and Ecology. William G. R. Crampton and James S. Albert ............................................. 525–533.<br />

Two New Species of the Hyla circumdata Group from Serra do <strong>Mar</strong> and Serra da<br />

Mantiqueira, Southeastern Brazil, with Description of the Advertisement Call of Hyla<br />

ibitipoca (Anura, Hylidae). <strong>Mar</strong>celo Felgueiras Napoli and Ulisses Caramaschi............................ 534–545.<br />

Scorpaenopsis insperatus: A New Species of Scorpionfish from Sydney Harbour, New<br />

South Wales, Australia (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae). Hiroyuki Motomura............................. 546–550.<br />

Lopholiparis flerxi: A New Genus and Species of Snailfish (Scorpaeniformes:<br />

Liparidae) from the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. James Wil<strong>de</strong>r Orr..................................................... 551–555.<br />

10


Icelinus limbaughi: A New Species of Sculpin (Teleostei: Cottidae) from Southern<br />

California. Richard H. Rosenblatt and William Leo Smith............................................................... 556–561.<br />

New Species of Pachycara Zugmayer (Pisces: Zoarcidae) from the Rainbow<br />

Hydrothermal Vent Field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge). Manuel Biscoito and Armando J.<br />

Almeida............................................................................................................................................ 562–568.<br />

Rivulus duckensis (Teleostei; Cyprinodontiformes): New Species from the Tarumã<br />

Basin of Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil, and Its Relationship to Other Neotropical<br />

Rivulidae. Tomas Hrbek, Cláudia Pereira <strong>de</strong> Deus, and Izeni Pires Farias.................................... 569–576.<br />

New Knodus (Ostariophysi: Characiformes: Characidae) from the Upper Rio Paraguay<br />

Basin, Brazil. Flávio C. T. Lima, Heraldo A. Britski, and Francisco A. Machado............................ 577–582.<br />

Neoetropus macrops Hil<strong>de</strong>brand and Schroe<strong>de</strong>r, 1928: A Reversed Specimen and a<br />

Junior Synonym of Citharichthys arctifrons Goo<strong>de</strong>, 1880 (Teleostei;<br />

Pleuronectiformes; Paralichthyidae). Koichi Hoshino and Thomas A. Munroe............................... 583–591.<br />

Are Spotted Bass (Micropterus punctulatus) Attracted to Schreckstoff? A Test of the<br />

Predator Attraction Hypothesis. Mollie F. Cashner......................................................................... 592–598.<br />

Bold Tail Coloration Protects Tadpoles from Dragonfly Strikes. Josh Van Buskirk,<br />

Janine Aschwan<strong>de</strong>n, Isabelle Buckelmüller, Sasha Reolon, and Silvan Rüttiman......................... 599–602.<br />

Methods for Preparing Dry, Partially Articulated Skeletons of Osteichthyans, with<br />

Notes on Making Ri<strong>de</strong>wood Dissections of the Cranial Skeleton. William E. Bemis,<br />

Eric J. Hilton, Barbara Brown, Radford Arrin<strong>de</strong>ll, Alan M. Richmond, Colin D. Little,<br />

Lance Gran<strong>de</strong>, Peter L. Forey, and Gareth J. Nelson..................................................................... 603–609.<br />

Testing the Role of Sediment-Mediated Interactions between Tadpoles and Armored<br />

Catfish in a Neotropical Stream. Christopher T. Solomon, Alexan<strong>de</strong>r S. Flecker, and<br />

Brad W. Taylor................................................................................................................................. 610–616.<br />

Factors Affecting Allopatric and Sympatric Occurrence of Two Sculpin Species across<br />

a Rocky Mountain Watershed. Michael C. Quist, Wayne A. Hubert, and Daniel J. Isaak.............. 617–623.<br />

Population Variation of Complex Advertisement Calls in Physalaemus petersi and<br />

Comparative Laryngeal Morphology. Kathryn E. Boul and Michael J. Ryan .................................. 624–631.<br />

Conservation Genetics of the Ashy Darter, Etheostoma cinereum (Percidae:<br />

Subgenus Allohistium), in the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers of the Southeastern<br />

United States. Steven L. Powers, Richard L. May<strong>de</strong>n, and David A. Etnier................................... 632–637.<br />

Larval Development and Recruitment of Juveniles in a Natural Population of Rana<br />

lessonae and Rana esculenta. Gaby Abt Tietje and Heinz-Ulrich Reyer........................................ 638–646.<br />

Shrinkage in the Body Length of Myctophid Fish (Diaphus Slen<strong>de</strong>r-Type spp.) Larvae<br />

with Various Preservatives. Masatoshi Moku, Ken Mori, and Yoshiro Watanabe .......................... 647–651.<br />

Responses of Kit Foxes (Vulpes macrotis) to Antipredator Blood-Squirting and Blood<br />

of Texas Horned Lizards (Phrynosoma cornutum). Wa<strong>de</strong> C. Sherbrooke and George<br />

A. Mid<strong>de</strong>ndorf III.............................................................................................................................. 652–658.<br />

Reproductive Investment of Female Green Toads (Bufo viridis). Sergio Castellano,<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>co Cucco, and Cristina Giacoma............................................................................................... 659–664.<br />

Heptapterus collettii Steindachner, 1881: A Member of the Asian Bagrid Genus Olyra<br />

Erroneously Assigned to the Neotropical Fauna (Siluriformes: Ostariophysi). Flávio A.<br />

Bockmann and Mário C. C. <strong>de</strong> Pinna.............................................................................................. 665–675.<br />

Advertisement Call Complexity in Northern Leopard Frogs, Rana pipiens. Krista A.<br />

Larson.............................................................................................................................................. 676–682.<br />

Overwintered Bullfrog Tadpoles Negatively Affect Salaman<strong>de</strong>rs and Anurans in Native<br />

Amphibian Communities. Michelle D. Boone, Edward E. Little, and Raymond D.<br />

Semlitsch......................................................................................................................................... 683–690.<br />

Chemosensory Recognition and Behavioral Responses of Wall Lizards, Podarcis<br />

muralis, to Scents of Snakes that Pose Different Risks of Predation. Luisa Amo, Pilar<br />

López, and José <strong>Mar</strong>tín................................................................................................................... 691–696.<br />

11


CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 08, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

TROPICS<br />

Highlights 3<br />

Table of Atmospheric Indices 5<br />

Table of Oceanic Indices 6<br />

FIGURE<br />

Time Series<br />

Southern Oscillation In<strong>de</strong>x (SOI) T1<br />

Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies T1<br />

OLR Anomalies T1<br />

CDAS/Reanalysis SOI & Equatorial SOI T2<br />

200-hPa Zonal Wind Anomalies T3<br />

500-hPa Temperature Anomalies T3<br />

30-hPa and 50-hPa Zonal Wind Anomalies<br />

1'3<br />

850-hPa 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-hPa Zonal Wind<br />

T7<br />

Mean and Anomalous OLR T8<br />

Mean and Anomalous SST 'C9<br />

Pentad SLP Anomalies T I0<br />

Pentad OLR Anomalies T1 1<br />

Pentad 200-hPa Velocity Potential Anomalies<br />

T12<br />

Pentad 850-hPa Zonal Wind Anomalies T13<br />

Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind T14<br />

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

Isotherm T15<br />

Mean & Anomaly Fields<br />

Depth of the 20°C Isotherm T16<br />

Subsurface Equatorial Pacific Temperatures<br />

T17<br />

SST T18<br />

SLP T19<br />

850-hPa Vector Wind T20<br />

200-hPa Vector Wind T21<br />

200-hPa Streamfunction T22<br />

200-hPa Divergence T23<br />

200-hPa Velocity Potential and Divergent Wind<br />

T24<br />

OLR T25<br />

SSM/1 Tropical Precipitation Estimates T26<br />

Cloud Liquid Water T27<br />

Precipitable Water "f28<br />

Relative Humidity & E-W Divergent Circulation<br />

T29<br />

Pacific Zonal Wind & N-S Divergent Circulation<br />

T31<br />

Thermistor Chain Data A1.2<br />

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

A1.3<br />

FIGURE<br />

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

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

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

FORECAST FORUM<br />

Discussion 46<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts F I - F2<br />

NCEP Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts F3 - F4<br />

NCEP <strong>Mar</strong>kov Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts F5 - F6<br />

L<strong>DE</strong>O Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts F7 - F8<br />

Linear Inverse Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Forecasts F9 - F 10<br />

Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecast Flt<br />

ENSO-CLIPER Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecast F12<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts of Nino 3.4 F13<br />

EXTRATROPICS<br />

Highlights 61<br />

Table of Teleconnection Indices 62<br />

Global Surface Temperature El<br />

Temperature Anomalies (Land Only) E2<br />

Global Precipitation E3<br />

Regional Precipitation Estimates E4 - E5<br />

U. S. Precipitation E6<br />

Northern Hemisphere<br />

Teleconnection Indices E7<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E8<br />

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

Mean and Anomalous 300-hPa Wind Vectors El0<br />

500-hPa Persistence E l 1<br />

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

Anomalies E12<br />

700-hPa Storm Track E13<br />

Southern Hemisphere<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E14<br />

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

Mean and Anomalous 300-hPa Wind Vectors<br />

E16<br />

500-hPa Persistence E17<br />

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

Anomalies EIS<br />

Stratosphere<br />

Height Anomalies SI - S2<br />

Temperatures S3 - S4<br />

Ozone S5 - S6<br />

Vertical Component of EP Flux S7<br />

Ozone Hole S8<br />

Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />

Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa AnomaliesA2.1<br />

Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1<br />

12


COPEIA:<br />

No. 3, August 20, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Global amphibian <strong>de</strong>clines: sorting the hypotheses...................................................................................89<br />

James P. Collins, Andrew Storfer<br />

Alien predators and amphibian <strong>de</strong>clines: review of two <strong>de</strong>ca<strong>de</strong>s of science and the transition to<br />

conservation................................................................................................................................................99<br />

Lee B. Kats, Ryan P. Ferrer<br />

Climate change and amphibian <strong>de</strong>clines: is there a link?.........................................................................111<br />

Cynthia Carey, Michael A. Alexan<strong>de</strong>r<br />

Ultraviolet radiation, toxic chemicals and amphibian population <strong>de</strong>clines................................................123<br />

Andrew R. Blaustein, John M. Romansic, Joseph M. Kiesecker, Audrey C. Hatch<br />

Infectious disease and amphibian population <strong>de</strong>clines ............................................................................141<br />

Peter Daszak, Andrew A. Cunningham, Alex D. Hyatt<br />

Amphibian <strong>de</strong>clines: future directions.......................................................................................................151<br />

Andrew Storfer<br />

Bibliodiversions<br />

Eyewitnesses to History?..........................................................................................................................165<br />

Karen R. Lips<br />

THE book on Costa Rica's herpetofauna for <strong>de</strong>ca<strong>de</strong>s to come................................................................166<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tha L. Crump<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 9, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2003.<br />

Testing the grass-fire cycle: alien grass invasion in the tropical savannas of northern Australia ............169<br />

Natalie A. Rossiter, Samantha A. Setterfield, Michael M. Douglas, Lindsay B. Hutley<br />

Diversity of native and alien plant species on rubbish dumps: effects of dump age, environmental<br />

factors and toxicity....................................................................................................................................177<br />

Antonín Pyek, Petr PyEk, Vojtch Jaroík, Miroslav Hájek, Jan Wild<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntifying spatial components of ecological and evolutionary processes for regional conservation<br />

planning in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa.................................................................................191<br />

Mathieu Rouget, Richard M. Cowling, Robert L. Pressey, David M. Richardson<br />

Factors affecting range size differences for plant species on rock outcrops in eastern Australia............211<br />

John T. Hunter<br />

Floristic variation, chorological types and diversity: do they correspond at broad and local scales?.......221<br />

Dolores Ferrer-Castán, Ole R. Vetaas<br />

Multivariate mapping of spatial variation in biodiversity in Peruvian Amazonia .......................................237<br />

Sam Rose, Alan Grainger<br />

Bibliodiversions<br />

On the road to un<strong>de</strong>rstanding: from John Wyndham to reality.................................................................251<br />

Petr Pyek<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 9, No. 3, May 2003.<br />

Testing the grass-fire cycle: alien grass invasion in the tropical savannas of northern Australia ............169<br />

Natalie A. Rossiter, Samantha A. Setterfield, Michael M. Douglas, Lindsay B. Hutley<br />

Diversity of native and alien plant species on rubbish dumps: effects of dump age, environmental<br />

factors and toxicity....................................................................................................................................177<br />

Antonín Pyek, Petr PyEk, Vojtch Jaroík, Miroslav Hájek, Jan Wild<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntifying spatial components of ecological and evolutionary processes for regional conservation<br />

planning in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa.................................................................................191<br />

Mathieu Rouget, Richard M. Cowling, Robert L. Pressey, David M. Richardson<br />

Factors affecting range size differences for plant species on rock outcrops in eastern Australia............211<br />

John T. Hunter<br />

Floristic variation, chorological types and diversity: do they correspond at broad and local scales?.......221<br />

Dolores Ferrer-Castán, Ole R. Vetaas<br />

Multivariate mapping of spatial variation in biodiversity in Peruvian Amazonia .......................................237<br />

Sam Rose, Alan Grainger<br />

13


Bibliodiversions<br />

On the road to un<strong>de</strong>rstanding: from John Wyndham to reality.................................................................251<br />

Petr Pyek<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 9, No. 4, July 2003.<br />

Relating species abundance distributions to species-area curves in two Mediterranean-type<br />

shrublands<br />

Jon E. Keeley<br />

Direction of movements in Hungarian Barn Owls (Tyto alba): gene flow and barriers.............................261<br />

Róbert Mátics<br />

Comparative phylogeography of salmonid fishes (Salmonidae) reveals late to post-Pleistocene<br />

exchange between three now-disjunct river basins in Siberia..................................................................269<br />

E. Froufe, S. Alekseyev, I. Knizhin, P. Alexandrino, S. Weiss<br />

Performance of nonparametric species richness estimators in a high diversity plant community...........283<br />

A. Chiarucci, N. J. Enright, G. L. W. Perry, B. P. Miller, B. B. Lamont<br />

Landscape characteristics, spatial extent, and breeding bird diversity in Ohio, USA ..............................297<br />

Audrey L. Mayer, Guy N. Cameron<br />

Phytogeographic analysis of taxa en<strong>de</strong>mic to the Yucatán Peninsula using geographic information<br />

systems, the domain heuristic method and parsimony analysis of en<strong>de</strong>micity........................................313<br />

Celene Espadas Manrique, Rafael Durán, Jorge Argáez<br />

Bibliodiversions<br />

THE COSTS OF BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS............................................................................................331<br />

Pierre Binggeli<br />

SONORAN <strong>DE</strong>SERT INVASIONS UN<strong>DE</strong>R THE SPOTLIGHT................................................................332<br />

David M. Richardson<br />

A PLANT MANUAL FOR THE CALIFORNIA <strong>DE</strong>SERTS.........................................................................333<br />

Ellen Dean<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 10, No. 4, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Reconstructing the Pleistocene geography of the Aphelocoma jays (Corvidae)......................................237<br />

A. Townsend Peterson, Enrique <strong>Mar</strong>tínez-Meyer, Constantino González-Salazar<br />

Does plant richness influence animal richness?: the mammals of Catalonia (NE Spain)........................247<br />

Bradford A. Hawkins, Juli G. Pausas<br />

The fundamental and realized niche of the Monterey Pine aphid, Essigella californica (Essig)<br />

(Hemiptera: Aphididae): implications for managing softwood plantations in Australia.............................253<br />

Trudi N. Wharton, Darren J. Kriticos<br />

Frequent and occasional species and the shape of relative-abundance distributions.............................263<br />

Werner Ulrich, <strong>Mar</strong>cin Ollik<br />

Reconstruction of the colonization route from glacial refugium to the northern distribution range of<br />

the European butterfly Polyommatus coridon (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae)................................................271<br />

Thomas Schmitt, Jochen Krauss<br />

The 'species problem' and testing macroevolutionary hypotheses..........................................................275<br />

Nick J. B. Isaac, Andy Purvis<br />

Quantitative trait, genetic, environmental, and geographical distances among populations of the<br />

C4 grass Trachypogon plumosus in Neotropical savannas .....................................................................283<br />

Zdravko Baruch, Jafet M. Nassar, José Bubis<br />

Diversity of geometrid moths (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) along an Afrotropical elevational<br />

rainforest transect.....................................................................................................................................293<br />

Jan C. Axmacher, Gabriele Holtmann, Luis Scheuermann, Gunnar Brehm, Klaus Müller-<br />

Hohenstein, Konrad Fiedler<br />

Density and species diversity of trees in four tropical forests of the Albertine rift, western Uganda........303<br />

Gerald Eilu, David L. N. Hafashimana, John M. Kasenene<br />

Bibliodiversions<br />

Dynamics of temperate lake ecosystems.................................................................................................313<br />

Kevin J. Murphy<br />

Invasive aquatic species of Europe..........................................................................................................313<br />

14


Susan Galatowitsch<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 45, No. 8, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Water quality impacts from waste rock at a Carlin-type gold mine, Elko County, Nevada ........1043 - 1053<br />

Sam Earman and RonaldL. Hershey<br />

Enhancement of aquifer vulnerability in<strong>de</strong>xing using the analytic-element method ..................1054 - 1061<br />

K.C. Fredrick, M.W. Becker, D.M. Flewelling, et al.<br />

Vulnerability evaluation of a coastal plain sand aquifer with a case example from Calabar,<br />

southeastern Nigeria ..................................................................................................................1062 - 1070<br />

A.E. E<strong>de</strong>t<br />

Nature and origin of arsenic carriers in shallow aquifer sediments of Bengal Delta, India .......1071 - 1081<br />

S. Sengupta, P.K. Mukherjee, T. Pal, et al.<br />

Study of the radon concentrations in drinking water from three main cities of Shaanxi Province,<br />

China ..........................................................................................................................................1082 - 1086<br />

Lu Xinwei and Zhang Xiaolan<br />

Hydrogeochemical mo<strong>de</strong>ling of the water seepages through Tannur Dam, southern Jordan ..1087 - 1100<br />

Ali El Naqa and Mustafa Al Kuisi<br />

Spatial variations in heavy metals on tidal flats in the Yangtze Estuary, China ........................1101 - 1108<br />

S. Gorenc, R. Kostaschuk, Z. Chen<br />

Kinetics and Equilibrium Sorption Studies of 4-Nitrophenol on pyrolyzed and activated oil shale<br />

residue .......................................................................................................................................1109 - 1117<br />

Sameer Al-Asheh, Fawzi Banat, Asmahan Masad<br />

Sodium affected subsoils, gypsum, and green-manure: Inter- actions and implications for<br />

amelioration of toxic red mud wastes ........................................................................................1118 - 1130<br />

M.A. Harris and P. Rengasamy<br />

Environmental impact of drainage of Dianzi Iron Mine on the groundwater system of the Dawu<br />

Water Supply Base ....................................................................................................................1131 - 1136<br />

He Keqiang and Xu Guangming<br />

Release of heavy metals during weathering of the Lower Cambrian Black Shales in western<br />

Hunan, China .............................................................................................................................1137 - 1147<br />

Bo Peng, Zhaoliang Song, Xiangling Tu, et al.<br />

Ca-H-Al exchanges and aluminium mobility in two Chinese acidic forest soils: a batch experiment<br />

...................................................................................................................................................1148 - 1153<br />

J. Guo, R.D. Vogt, X. Zhang, et al.<br />

Characterization of land subsi<strong>de</strong>nce in the Choshui River alluvial fan, Taiwan ........................1154 - 1166<br />

Chih-Hsi Liu, Yii-Wen Pan, Jyh-Jong Liao, et al.<br />

Stability of expansive cement grout borehole seals emplaced in the vicinity of un<strong>de</strong>rground<br />

radioactive waste repositories ....................................................................................................1167 - 1171<br />

H. Akgün and J.J.K. Daemen<br />

Relationships of longitudinal dispersivity and scale <strong>de</strong>veloped from fuzzy least-squares<br />

regressions .................................................................................................................................1172 - 1178<br />

V. Uddameri<br />

Book reviews................................................................................................................................1179 - 1180<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 46, No. 1, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Assessment of groundwater resi<strong>de</strong>nce times in the pore aquifers of the River Elbe Basin ..................1 - 9<br />

F. Wendland, R. Kunkel, H.-J. Voigt<br />

Phytoplankton estimation using plant primary production rates in streams ......................................10 - 14<br />

Kyung-Sub Kim and Chung-Hwan Je<br />

Treatment of a potential soil capping for open-cut mines (Part 1): Influence of prior management<br />

on responses to a phyto-organic amendment ...................................................................................15 - 21<br />

M. A. Harris and P. Rengasamy<br />

The extent of <strong>de</strong>sertification on Saudi Arabia ....................................................................................22 - 31<br />

Ammar A. Amin<br />

Subbottom acoustic and sedimentary records of past surface water–groundwater exchange<br />

through sinkhole lakes in south Georgia, U.S.A ................................................................................32 - 46<br />

15


J. A. Hyatt and R. Gilbert<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification and evolution of hydrogeochemical processes in the groundwater environment in an<br />

area of the Palar and Cheyyar River Basins, Southern India ............................................................47 - 61<br />

N. Rajmohan and L. Elango<br />

Estimation of heavy metals (Cu, Zn, Pb) input into Punat Bay ..........................................................62 - 70<br />

N. Mikulic, V. Orescanin, T. Legovic, et al.<br />

Changes in groundwater chemistry due to metallurgical activities in an alluvial aquifer in the Moa<br />

area (Cuba) ........................................................................................................................................71 - 82<br />

R. Rodríguez and L. Can<strong>de</strong>la<br />

Evaluation of rock excavatability and slope stability along a segment of motorway, Pozanti, Turkey<br />

.............................................................................................................................................................83 - 95<br />

B. Kentli and T. Topal<br />

Distribution of arsenic and other minor trace elements in the groundwater of Ischia Island<br />

(southern Italy) .................................................................................................................................96 - 103<br />

Linda Daniele<br />

Risk assessment of earth fractures by constructing an intrinsic vulnerability map, a specific<br />

vulnerability map, and a hazard map, using Yuci City, Shanxi, China as an example ..................104 - 112<br />

Qiang Wu, Siyuan Ye, Xiong Wu, et al.<br />

Vulnerability mapping of the Turonian limestone aquifer in the Phosphates Plateau (Morocco) ..113 - 117<br />

S. Ettazarini and N. El Mahmouhi<br />

Electrical resistivity surveys to <strong>de</strong>lineate groundwater potential aquifers in Peddavanka watershed,<br />

Anantapur District, Andhra Pra<strong>de</strong>sh, India ....................................................................................118 - 131<br />

S. Srinivasa Gowd<br />

Statistical assessment of geochemical pattern in overbank sediments of the river Sava, Croatia 132 - 143<br />

Gordana Pavlovic, Esad Prohic, Darko Tibljas<br />

Views and news....................................................................................................................................... 144<br />

Book reviews....................................................................................................................................145 - 146<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 46, No. 2, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Influence of harbour constructions on morphosedimentary changes in the Tinto-Odiel estuary<br />

mouth (south-west Spain) ..............................................................................................................151 - 164<br />

J. A. Morales, J. Borrego, M. Ballesta<br />

Case histories of sand search in the Niger Delta ...........................................................................165 - 172<br />

T. K. S. Abam<br />

Natural baseline quality of Madrid Tertiary Detrital Aquifer groundwater (Spain): a basis for aquifer<br />

management ..................................................................................................................................173 - 188<br />

M. Elvira Hernán<strong>de</strong>z-García and Emilio Custodio<br />

Application of geostatistics and GIS technique to characterize spatial variabilities of bioavailable<br />

micronutrients in paddy soils ..........................................................................................................189 - 194<br />

X. M. Liu, J. M. Xu, M. K. Zhang, et al.<br />

Framework for soil suitability evaluation for sewage effluent renovation ......................................195 - 208<br />

Steven Carroll, Ashantha Goonetilleke, Les Dawes<br />

Evaluation of acid-producing sulfidic materials in Virginia highway corridors ...............................209 - 216<br />

Zenah W. Orndorff and W. Lee Daniels<br />

Web-based application for estimating water quality impacts due to environmental dredging .......217 - 225<br />

Chung-hwan Je and Kyung-sub Kim<br />

Editorial<br />

XXXII International Congress of IAH (International Association of Hydrogeologists) and the VI<br />

Congress of ALHSUD (Latin American Association of Groundwater Hydrology for Development),<br />

20–25 October 2002 ......................................................................................................................226 - 227<br />

Eduardo Usunoff<br />

Fingerprinting sources of bacterial input into small resi<strong>de</strong>ntial watersheds: fate of fluorescent<br />

whitening agents ............................................................................................................................228 - 232<br />

Thomas B. Boving, Debra L. Meritt, Jon C. Boothroyd<br />

The impacts of pasture- and manure-spreading on microbial groundwater quality in carbonate<br />

aquifers ..........................................................................................................................................233 - 236<br />

F. Celico, I. Musilli, G. Naclerio<br />

16


Vulnerability assessment in karstic areas: validation by field experiments ...................................237 - 245<br />

J. Perrin, A. Pochon, P.-Y. Jeannin, et al.<br />

Balancing the contaminant input into urban water resources ........................................................246 - 256<br />

M. Eiswirth, L. Wolf, H. Hötzl<br />

A temporary sampling technique for investigating groundwater quality near the ground surface .257 - 262<br />

W. Macheleidt, J. Herlitzius, W. Nestler, et al.<br />

Analysis of the distribution of inorganic constituents in a landfill leachate-contaminated aquifer:<br />

Astrolabe Park, Sydney, Australia .................................................................................................263 - 272<br />

L. B. Jorstad, J. Jankowski, R. I. Acworth<br />

Saline groundwater seepage zones and their impact on soil and water resources in the Spicers<br />

Creek catchment, central west, New South Wales, Australia ........................................................273 - 285<br />

Karina Morgan and Jerzy Jankowski<br />

Hydrogeological problems for the rehabilitation and re-utilisation of the water resources of the<br />

mining area of Gavorrano (Italy) ....................................................................................................286 - 294<br />

C. A. Garzonio and A. M. G. Affuso<br />

Probing the relationship between surface waters and aquifers by 18O measurements on the top of<br />

the Araripe Plateau/NE Brazil ........................................................................................................295 - 302<br />

Luiz Alberto Ribeiro Mendonça, Horst Frischkorn, <strong>Mar</strong>ia <strong>Mar</strong>lúcia Freitas Santiago, et al.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 132, No. 2, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Accelerated remediation of pestici<strong>de</strong>-contaminated soil with zerovalent iron • .............................. 183-188<br />

P.J. Shea, T.A. Machacek and S.D. Comfort<br />

Sequential extraction of heavy metals in river sediments of an abandoned pyrite mining area:<br />

pollution <strong>de</strong>tection and affinity series • ............................................................................................ 189-201<br />

F. Pagnanelli, E. Moscardini, V. Giuliano and L. Toro<br />

Selenium accumulation in the cockle Anadara trapezia • ............................................................... 203-212<br />

Dianne F. Jolley, William A. Maher and Jennelle Kyd<br />

Irrigation runoff insectici<strong>de</strong> pollution of rivers in the Imperial Valley, California (USA) • ................ 213-229<br />

V. <strong>de</strong> Vlaming, C. DiGiorgio, S. Fong, L.A. Deanovic, M. <strong>de</strong> la Paz Carpio-Obeso, J.L. Miller, M.J.<br />

Miller and N.J. Richard<br />

In situ and laboratory bioassays to evaluate the impact of effluent discharges on receiving aquatic<br />

ecosystems • ................................................................................................................................... 231-243<br />

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

An ecologically relevant exposure assessment for a polluted river using an integrated multivariate<br />

PLS approach • ............................................................................................................................... 245-263<br />

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

Modification of trace metal accumulation in the green mussel Perna viridis by exposure to Ag, Cu,<br />

and Zn • ........................................................................................................................................... 265-277<br />

Dalin Shi and Wen-Xiong Wang<br />

Genotoxic and teratogenic potential of marine sediment extracts investigated with comet assay<br />

and zebrafish test • ......................................................................................................................... 279-287<br />

Ulrike Kammann, Scarlett Biselli, Heinrich Hühnerfuss, Ninja Reineke, Norbert Theobald, Michael<br />

Vobach and Werner Wosniok<br />

Effects of heavy metals on growth and arsenic accumulation in the arsenic hyperaccumulator<br />

Pteris vittata L. • .............................................................................................................................. 289-296<br />

Abioye O. Fayiga, Lena Q. Ma, Xin<strong>de</strong> Cao and B. Rathinasabapathi<br />

Growth response to ozone of annual species from Mediterranean pastures • ............................... 297-306<br />

B.S. Gimeno, V. Bermejo, J. Sanz, D. <strong>de</strong> la Torre and S. Elvira<br />

The uptake of uranium by Eleocharis dulcis (Chinese water chestnut) in the Ranger Uranium Mine<br />

constructed wetland filter • .............................................................................................................. 307-320<br />

Robyn A. Overall and David L. Parry<br />

Effects of ozone on the foliar histology of the mastic plant (Pistacia lentiscus L.) • ....................... 321-331<br />

J. Reig-Armiñana, V. Calatayud, J. Cerveró, F. J. García-Breijo, A. Ibars and M. J. Sanz<br />

Chelator induced phytoextraction and in situ soil washing of Cu • ................................................. 333-339<br />

Botjan Kos and Domen Letan<br />

Sediment quality in littoral regions of the Gulf of Cádiz: a triad approach to address the influence of<br />

mining activities • ............................................................................................................................ 341-353<br />

17


I. Riba, Jesús M. Forja, Abelardo Gómez-Parra and T. Ángel DelValls<br />

A retrospective assessment of gold mining in the Reedy Creek sub-catchment, northeast Victoria,<br />

Australia: residual mercury contamination 100 years later • ........................................................... 355-363<br />

R. C. Churchill, C. E. Meathrel and P. J. Suter<br />

Distinguishing sources of groundwater nitrate by 1H NMR of dissolved organic matter • ............. 365-374<br />

Jianhang Lu, Andrew C. Chang and Laosheng Wu<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY<br />

SORPTION OF STEROID ESTROGENS TO SOILS AND SEDIMENTS. Zhiqiang Yu, Baohua<br />

Xiao, Weilin Huang, and Ping'an Peng........................................................................................... 531–539.<br />

PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS IN AIR AND VEGETATION FROM THE CANADIAN<br />

ROCKY MOUNTAINS. Deborah A. Davidson, Andrew C. Wilkinson, Lynda E. Kimpe, and Jules M.<br />

Blais ................................................................................................................................................ 540–549.<br />

INFLUENCE OF HYDROXYPROPYL-β-CYCLO<strong>DE</strong>XTRIN ON THE EXTRACTION AND<br />

BIO<strong>DE</strong>GRADATION OF PHENANTHRENE IN SOIL. Brian J. Reid, Joanna D. Stokes, Kevin C.<br />

Jones, and Kirk T. Semple.............................................................................................................. 550–556.<br />

TOXICITY TESTING OF 16 PRIORITY POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS USING<br />

LUMISTOX®. Andreas P. Loibner, Oliver H.J. Szolar, Rudolf Braun, and Doris Hirmann............ 557–564.<br />

CHEMOMETRIC MO<strong>DE</strong>LING OF MAIN CONTAMINATION SOURCES IN SURFACE WATERS<br />

OF PORTUGAL. Romà Tauler, Silvia Lacorte, Miriam Guillamón, Raquel Cespe<strong>de</strong>s, Paula Viana,<br />

and Damia Barceló ......................................................................................................................... 565–575.<br />

COMBINED EFFECTS OF HUMIC ACIDS AND SALINITY ON SOLID-PHASE<br />

MICROEXTRACTION OF DDT AND CHLORPYRIFOS, AN ESTIMATOR OF THEIR<br />

BIOAVAILABILITY. Laurent C. Mézin and Robert C. Hale............................................................. 576–582.<br />

EFFECT OF HUMIC ACIDS ON TOXICITY OF DDT AND CHLORPYRIFOS TO FRESHWATER<br />

AND ESTUARINE INVERTEBRATES. Laurent C. Mézin and Robert C. Hale.............................. 583–590.<br />

ANAEROBIC TRANSFORMATION OF COMPOUNDS OF TECHNICAL TOXAPHENE. 2. FATE<br />

OF COMPOUNDS LACKING GEMINAL CHLORINE ATOMS. Steffen Ruppe, Anke Neumann,<br />

Eric Braekevelt, Gregg T. Tomy, Gary A. Stern, Keith A. <strong>Mar</strong>uya, and Walter Vetter.................... 591–598.<br />

<strong>DE</strong>TERMINATION OF <strong>DE</strong>GRADATION PRODUCTS OF ALKYLPHENOL POLYETHOXYLATES<br />

IN MUNICIPAL WASTEWATERS AND RIVERS INTOKYO, JAPAN. Tomohiko Isobe and<br />

Hi<strong>de</strong>shige Takada........................................................................................................................... 599–605.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY<br />

<strong>DE</strong>RIVATION OF A CHRONIC SITE-SPECIFIC WATER QUALITY STANDARD FOR SELENIUM<br />

IN THE GREAT SALT LAKE, UTAH, USA. Kevin V. Brix, David K. DeForest, Rick D. Cardwell,<br />

and William J. Adams..................................................................................................................... 606–612.<br />

GLYCOSIDATION OF CHLOROPHENOLS BY LEMNA MINOR. James A. Day and F. Michael<br />

Saun<strong>de</strong>rs......................................................................................................................................... 613–620.<br />

BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE OF YOUNG RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) TO<br />

FOREST FIRE–RETARDANT CHEMICALS IN THE LABORATORY. Jason B. Wells, Edward E.<br />

Little, and Robin D. Calfee.............................................................................................................. 621–625.<br />

TRIVALENT CHROMIUM ALTERS GENE EXPRESSION IN THE MUMMICHOG (FUNDULUS<br />

HETEROCLITUS). Nikki L. Maples and Lisa J. Bain...................................................................... 626–631.<br />

INTERLABORATORY COMPARISON OF A REDUCED VOLUME MARINE SEDIMENT<br />

TOXICITY TEST METHOD USING THE AMPHIPOD AMPELISCA ABDITA. James A. Ferretti,<br />

Diane F. Calesso, James M. Lazorchak, Thomas J. Dolce, Jennifer Arnold, William L. Goodfellow,<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k E. Smith, and Jonathan R. Serbst ......................................................................................... 632–637.<br />

TUMOR PREVALENCE AND BIOMARKERS OF EXPOSURE AND RESPONSE IN BROWN<br />

BULLHEAD (AMEIURUS NEBULOSUS) FROM THE ANACOSTIA RIVER, WASHINGTON, DC<br />

AND TUCKAHOE RIVER, MARYLAND, USA. Alfred E. Pinkney, John C. Harshbarger, Eric B.<br />

May, and William L. Reichert.......................................................................................................... 638–647.<br />

MECHANISMS OF CADMIUM TOXICITY IN TERRESTRIAL PULMONATES: PROGRAMMED<br />

CELL <strong>DE</strong>ATH AND METALLOTHIONEIN OVERLOAD. Monika Chabicovsky, Waltraud Klepal,<br />

and Reinhard Dallinger................................................................................................................... 648–655.<br />

A COMPARISON OF THE FISH BIOCONCENTRATION FACTORS FOR BROMINATED FLAME<br />

RETARDANTS WITH THEIR NONBROMINATED ANALOGUES. <strong>Mar</strong>cia L. Hardy..................... 656–661.<br />

18


EFFECTS OF EXPOSURE TO A COMBINATION OF ZINC- AND LEAD-SPIKED SEDIMENTS<br />

ON MOUTHPART <strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT AND GROWTH IN CHIRONOMUS TENTANS. Edward A.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tinez, Barry C. Moore, John Schaumloffel, and Nairanjana Dasgupta..................................... 662–667.<br />

TRACE METAL AVAILABILITY AND EFFECTS ON BENTHIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN<br />

FLOODPLAIN LAKES. Corine van Griethuysen, Joyce van Baren, Edwin T.H.M. Peeters, and<br />

Albert A. Koelmans......................................................................................................................... 668–681.<br />

SILVER UPTAKE BY A MARINE DIATOM AND ITS TRANSFER TO THE COASTAL COPEPOD<br />

ACARTIA SPINICAUDA. Yan Xu and Wen-Xiong Wang............................................................... 682–690.<br />

ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF NICKEL TO A CLADOCERAN (CERIODAPHNIA DUBIA)<br />

AND AN AMPHIPOD (HYALELLA AZTECA). James Keithly, John A. Brooker, David K. DeForest,<br />

Benjamin K. Wu, and Kevin V. Brix ................................................................................................ 691–696.<br />

MECHANISTIC APPROACHES FOR EVALUATING THE TOXICITY OF REACTIVE<br />

ORGANOCHLORINES AND EPOXI<strong>DE</strong>S IN GREEN ALGAE. Christian Nie<strong>de</strong>rer, Renata Behra,<br />

Angela Har<strong>de</strong>r, René P. Schwarzenbach, and Beate I. Escher..................................................... 697–704.<br />

ESTROGENIC POTENTIAL OF HALOGENATED <strong>DE</strong>RIVATIVES OF NONYLPHENOL<br />

ETHOXYLATES AND CARBOXYLATES. Natàlia García-Reyero, Vanessa Requena, Mira<br />

Petrovic, Birgit Fischer, Peter-Diedrich Hansen, Alfredo Díaz, Francesc Ventura, Damià Barceló,<br />

and Benjamin Piña.......................................................................................................................... 705–711.<br />

GEN<strong>DE</strong>R AND SPATIAL PATTERNS IN METAL CONCENTRATIONS IN BROWN ANOLES<br />

(ANOLIS SAGREI) IN SOUTHERN FLORIDA, USA. Joanna Burger, Kym Rouse Campbell, and<br />

Todd S. Campbell........................................................................................................................... 712–718.<br />

USE OF VEGETATIVE FURROWS TO MITIGATE COPPER LOADS AND SOIL LOSS IN<br />

RUNOFF FROM POLYETHYLENE (PLASTIC) MULCH VEGETABLE PRODUCTION SYSTEMS.<br />

Pamela J. Rice, Jennifer A. Harman-Fetcho, John R. Teasdale, Ali M. Sa<strong>de</strong>ghi, Laura L.<br />

McConnell, C. Benjamin Coffman, Rachel R. Herbert, Lynne P. Heighton, and Cathleen J.<br />

Hapeman......................................................................................................................................... 719–725.<br />

ORGANOCHLORINE CONTAMINANTS IN SEA TURTLES: CORRELATIONS BETWEEN<br />

WHOLE BLOOD AND FAT. Jennifer M. Keller, John R. Kucklick, Craig A. Harms, and Patricia D.<br />

McClellan-Green............................................................................................................................. 726–738.<br />

EFFECT OF CARBON DIOXI<strong>DE</strong> ON URANIUM BIOACCUMULATION IN THE FRESHWATER<br />

CLAM CORBICULA FLUMINEA. Damien Tran, Jean-Charles Massabuau, and Jacqueline<br />

Garnier-Laplace.............................................................................................................................. 739–747.<br />

SURVEYS OF PLASMA VITELLOGENIN AND INTERSEX IN MALE FLOUN<strong>DE</strong>R (PLATICHTHYS<br />

FLESUS) AS MEASURES OF ENDOCRINE DISRUPTION BY ESTROGENIC CONTAMINATION<br />

IN UNITED KINGDOM ESTUARIES: TEMPORAL TRENDS, 1996 TO 2001. <strong>Mar</strong>k F. Kirby,<br />

Yvonne T. Allen, Robert A. Dyer, Steve W. Feist, Ioanna Katsiadaki, Peter Matthiessen, Alex P.<br />

Scott, Andrew Smith, Grant D. Stentiford, John E. Thain, Kevin V. Thomas, Laura Tolhurst, and<br />

Michael J. Waldock......................................................................................................................... 748–758.<br />

BIOMONITORING OF CONTAMINANTS IN BIRDS FROM TWO TROPHIC LEVELS IN THE<br />

NORTH PACIFIC. Deborah A. Rocque and Kevin Winker............................................................. 759–766.<br />

A METHOD FOR PREDICTING BIOAVAILABILITY OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS IN SOILS TO<br />

MAIZE. Wei-Sheng Wang, Xiao-Quan Shan, Bei Wen, and Shu-Zhen Zhang.............................. 767–773.<br />

FISH FULL LIFE-CYCLE TESTING FOR ANDROGEN METHYLTESTOSTERONE ON MEDAKA<br />

(ORYZIAS LATIPES). Masanori Seki, Hirofumi Yokota, Haruki Matsubara, Masanobu Maeda,<br />

Hiroshi Tadokoro, and Kunio Kobayashi........................................................................................ 774–781.<br />

ALTERATIONS TO GONADAL <strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT AND REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS IN<br />

JAPANESE MEDAKA (ORYZIAS LATIPES) EXPOSED TO 17α-ETHINYLESTRADIOL . Gordon<br />

C. Balch, Constanze A. Mackenzie, and Chris D. Metcalfe............................................................ 782–791.<br />

INCREASED KIDNEY, LIVER, AND TESTICULAR CELL <strong>DE</strong>ATH AFTER CHRONIC EXPOSURE<br />

TO 17α-ETHINYLESTRADIOL IN MEDAKA (ORYZIAS LATIPES). Lynn P. Weber, Gordon C.<br />

Balch, Chris D. Metcalfe, and David M. Janz................................................................................. 792–797.<br />

HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT<br />

THE SPATIAL EXTENT OF CONTAMINANTS AND THE LANDSCAPE SCALE: AN ANALYSIS<br />

OF THE WILDLIFE, CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, AND POPULATION MO<strong>DE</strong>LING<br />

LITERATURE. Tina M. Carlsen, Jessie D. Coty, and James R. Kercher....................................... 798–811.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 6, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

19


ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY<br />

PASSIVE AIR SAMPLING OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS AND<br />

POLYCHLORINATED NAPHTHALENES ACROSS EUROPE. Foday M. Jaward, Nick J. Farrar,<br />

Tom Harner, Andrew J. Sweetman, and Kevin C. Jones........................................................... 1355–1364.<br />

<strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT AND FIELD VALIDATION OF A BIOTIC LIGAND MO<strong>DE</strong>L PREDICTING<br />

CHRONIC COPPER TOXICITY TO DAPHNIA MAGNA. Karel A.C. De Schamphelaere and Colin<br />

R. Janssen.................................................................................................................................. 1365–1375.<br />

<strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT OF A COUPLED METAL SPECIATION–FATE MO<strong>DE</strong>L FOR SURFACE<br />

AQUATIC SYSTEMS. Satyendra P. Bhavsar, Miriam L. Diamond, Les J. Evans, Nilima Gandhi,<br />

Joel Nilsen, and Paula Antunes.................................................................................................. 1376–1385.<br />

WATER SOLUBILITY AND PARTITIONING BEHAVIOR OF BROMINATED PHENOLS. Hi<strong>de</strong>toshi<br />

Kuramochi, Kouji Maeda, and Katsuya Kawamoto .................................................................... 1386–1393.<br />

HYDROLYSIS AND PHOTOLYSIS OF PAROXETINE, A SELECTIVE SEROTONIN REUPTAKE<br />

INHIBITOR, IN AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS. Jeong-Wook Kwon and Kevin L. Armbrust.............. 1394–1399.<br />

PHOTOCHEMICAL TRANSFORMATION AND PHOTOTOXICITY OF 1-AMINOPYRENE. Kui<br />

Zeng, Huey-Min Hwang, Shiming Dong, Xiaochun Shi, Kaneytta Wilson, Jacinta Green, Yuguo<br />

Jiao, and Hongtao Yu ................................................................................................................. 1400–1407.<br />

QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT OF FATHEAD MINNOW VITELLOGENIN BY LIQUID<br />

CHROMATOGRAPHY COMBINED WITH TAN<strong>DE</strong>M MASS SPECTROMETRY USING A<br />

SIGNATURE PEPTI<strong>DE</strong> OF VITELLOGENIN. Fagen Zhang, Michael J. Bartels, Julie C. Bro<strong>de</strong>ur,<br />

and Kent B. Woodburn................................................................................................................ 1408–1415.<br />

MONITORING POLYNUCLEAR AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS IN AQUEOUS ENVIRONMENTS<br />

WITH PASSIVE LOW-<strong>DE</strong>NSITY POLYETHYLENE MEMBRANE <strong>DE</strong>VICES. <strong>Mar</strong>k G. Carls, Larry<br />

G. Holland, Jeffrey W. Short, Ron A. Heintz, and Stanley D. Rice............................................. 1416–1424.<br />

EFFECTS OF A RHAMNOLIPID BIOSURFACTANT ON THE REDUCTIVE <strong>DE</strong>CHLORINATION<br />

OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS BY ST. LAWRENCE RIVER (NORTH AMERICA)<br />

MICROORGANISMS. Young-Cheol Cho, Ellen B. Ostrofsky, and G.-Yull Rhee....................... 1425–1430.<br />

AQUATIC PERSISTENCE OF EIGHT PHARMACEUTICALS IN A MICROCOSM STUDY. Monica<br />

W. Lam, Cora J. Young, Richard A. Brain, David J. Johnson, <strong>Mar</strong>k A. Hanson, Christian J. Wilson,<br />

Sean M. Richards, Keith R. Solomon, and Scott A. Mabury...................................................... 1431–1440.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY<br />

<strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT OF FRESHWATER WATER-QUALITY CRITERIA FOR PERCHLORATE. Kirk E.<br />

Dean, Randy M. Palachek, Jill M. Noel, Ryan Warbritton, John Auf<strong>de</strong>rhei<strong>de</strong>, and Jody Wireman................<br />

1441–1451.<br />

<strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT OF MULTISPECIES ALGAL BIOASSAYS USING FLOW CYTOMETRY.<br />

Natasha M. Franklin, Jennifer L. Stauber, and Richard P. Lim .................................................. 1452–1462.<br />

LINKING METAL BIOACCUMULATION OF AQUATIC INSECTS TO THEIR DISTRIBUTION<br />

PATTERNS IN A MINING-IMPACTED RIVER. Daniel J. Cain, Samuel N. Luoma, and William G.<br />

Wallace....................................................................................................................................... 1463–1473.<br />

A HISTORICAL RECORD OF MERCURY CONTAMINATION IN SOUTHERN FLORIDA (USA) AS<br />

INFERRED FROM AVIAN FEATHER TISSUE. Peter C. Fre<strong>de</strong>rick, Becky Hylton, Julie A. Heath,<br />

and <strong>Mar</strong>ilyn G. Spalding.............................................................................................................. 1474–1478.<br />

AQUATIC RISK ASSESSMENT OF A REALISTIC EXPOSURE TO PESTICI<strong>DE</strong>S USED IN BULB<br />

CROPS: A MICROCOSM STUDY. René P.A. van Wijngaar<strong>de</strong>n, Jan G.M. Cuppen, Gertie H.P.<br />

Arts, Steven J.H. Crum, <strong>Mar</strong>tin W. van <strong>de</strong>n Hoorn, Paul J. van <strong>de</strong>n Brink, and Theo C.M. Brock<br />

.................................................................................................................................................... 1479–1498.<br />

FITNESS COST OF RESISTANCE TO CADMIUM IN THE LEAST KILLIFISH (HETERANDRIA<br />

FORMOSA). Lingtian Xie and Paul L. Klerks............................................................................. 1499–1503.<br />

MATERNAL TRANSFER EFFICIENCY AND TRANSGENERATIONAL TOXICITY OF<br />

METHYLMERCURY IN DAPHNIA MAGNA. <strong>Mar</strong>tin T.K. Tsui and Wen-Xiong Wang............... 1504–1511.<br />

ORGANISMAL EFFECTS OF PESTICI<strong>DE</strong> EXPOSURE ON MEADOW VOLES (MICROTUS<br />

PENNSYLVANICUS) LIVING IN GOLF COURSE ECOSYSTEMS: <strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENTAL<br />

INSTABILITY, CLINICAL HEMATOLOGY, BODY CONDITION, AND BLOOD PARASITOLOGY.<br />

Loren D. Knopper and Pierre Mineau......................................................................................... 1512–1519.<br />

METAL DYNAMICS OF PLANT LITTER OF SPARTINA ALTERNIFLORA AND PHRAGMITES<br />

AUSTRALIS IN METAL-CONTAMINATED SALT MARSHES. PART 1: PATTERNS OF<br />

<strong>DE</strong>COMPOSITION AND METAL UPTAKE. Lisamarie Windham, Judith S. Weis, and Peddrick<br />

Weis............................................................................................................................................ 1520–1528.<br />

20


TOXICITY OF BINARY MIXTURES OF CADMIUM-COPPER AND CARBENDAZIM- COPPER TO<br />

THE NEMATO<strong>DE</strong> CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS. <strong>Mar</strong>tijs J. Jonker, Anna M. Piskiewicz, Núria<br />

Ivorra i Castellà, and Jan E. Kammenga.................................................................................... 1529–1537.<br />

BIOCONCENTRATION, BIOTRANSFORMATION, AND ELIMINATION OF POLYCYCLIC<br />

AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS IN SHEEPSHEAD MINNOWS (CYPRINODON VARIEGATUS)<br />

EXPOSED TO CONTAMINATED SEAWATER. Grete Jonsson, Renee K. Bechmann, Shaw D.<br />

Bamber, and Thierry Baussant................................................................................................... 1538–1548.<br />

A PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH ASSAY FOR ROUTINE IN SITU ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

ASSESSMENTS. Matil<strong>de</strong> Moreira-Santos, Ama<strong>de</strong>u M.V.M. Soares, and Rui Ribeiro.............. 1549–1560.<br />

LETHAL AND SUBLETHAL EFFECTS OF LOW DISSOLVED OXYGEN CONDITION ON TWO<br />

AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES, CHIRONOMUS TENTANS AND HYALELLA AZTECA. Elaine C.<br />

Irving, Karsten Liber, and Joseph M. Culp.................................................................................. 1561–1566.<br />

INFLUENCE OF NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER SOURCE ON COPPER TOXICITY TO LARVAL<br />

FATHEAD MINNOWS (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS): IMPLICATIONS FOR THE BIOTIC LIGAND<br />

MO<strong>DE</strong>L. Adam C. Ryan, Eric J. Van Gen<strong>de</strong>ren, Joseph R. Tomasso, and Stephen J. Klaine . 1567–1574.<br />

HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT<br />

ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF PERSISTENT TOXIC SUBSTANCES FOR THE CLAM<br />

TAPES PHILIPINARUM IN THE LAGOON OF VENICE, ITALY. Christian Micheletti, Andrea Critto,<br />

Claudio Carlon, and Antonio <strong>Mar</strong>comini..................................................................................... 1575–1582.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 9, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY<br />

FATE AND STABILITY OF 14C-LABELED 2,4,6-TRINITROTOLUENE IN CONTAMINATED SOIL<br />

FOLLOWING MICROBIAL BIOREMEDIATION PROCESSES. <strong>Mar</strong>tin Weiß, Roland Geyer,<br />

Thomas Günther, and Matthias Kaestner................................................................................... 2049–2060.<br />

KINETICS OF TOLUENE SORPTION AND <strong>DE</strong>SORPTION IN CA- AND CU-<br />

MONTMORILLONITES INVESTIGATED WITH FOURIER TRANSFORM INFRARED<br />

SPECTROSCOPY UN<strong>DE</strong>R TWO DIFFERENT LEVELS OF HUMIDITY. Yang-Hsin Shih and<br />

Shian-Chee Wu........................................................................................................................... 2061–2067.<br />

CHEMICAL SPECIATION AND CELLULAR <strong>DE</strong>POSITION OF LEAD IN SESBANIA<br />

DRUMMONDII. Nilesh C. Sharma, Jorge L. Gar<strong>de</strong>a-Torres<strong>de</strong>y, Jason Parsons, and Shivendra V.<br />

Sahi............................................................................................................................................. 2068–2073.<br />

OCCURRENCE AND FATE OF PHARMACEUTICALS AND ALKYLPHENOL ETHOXYLATE<br />

METABOLITES IN AN EFFLUENT-DOMINATED RIVER AND WETLAND. Birgit Gross, John<br />

Montgomery-Brown, Anneke Naumann, and <strong>Mar</strong>tin Reinhard................................................... 2074–2083.<br />

AGING REDUCES THE BIOAVAILABILITY OF EVEN A WEAKLY SORBED PESTICI<strong>DE</strong><br />

(CARBARYL) IN SOIL. Riaz Ahmad, Rai S. Kookana, Mallavarapu Megharaj, and Angus M.<br />

Alston.......................................................................................................................................... 2084–2089.<br />

COMPARISON OF TIME-INTEGRATED PESTICI<strong>DE</strong> CONCENTRATIONS <strong>DE</strong>TERMINED FROM<br />

FIELD-<strong>DE</strong>PLOYED PASSIVE SAMPLERS WITH DAILY RIVER-WATER EXTRACTIONS. Ross V.<br />

Hyne, Fleur Pablo, Melissa Aistrope, Alex W. Leonard, and Nazir Ahmad................................ 2090–2098.<br />

THE ENHANCED BIO<strong>DE</strong>GRADATION OF FENAMIPHOS IN SOILS FROM PREVIOUSLY<br />

TREATED SITES AND THE EFFECT OF SOIL FUMIGANTS. Dimitrios Georgios Karpouzas,<br />

Polydoros Hatziapostolou, Euphemia Papadopoulou-Mourkidou, Ioannis O. Giannakou, and<br />

Athena Georgiadou..................................................................................................................... 2099–2107.<br />

A SURVEY OF METALS IN TISSUES OF FARMED ATLANTIC AND WILD PACIFIC SALMON.<br />

Jeffery A. Foran, Ronald A. Hites, David O. Carpenter, M. Coreen Hamilton, Amy Mathews-Amos,<br />

and Steven J. Schwager............................................................................................................. 2108–2110.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY<br />

QUANTITATIVE STRUCTURE–ACTIVITY RELATIONSHIP MO<strong>DE</strong>LING OF ACUTE TOXICITY<br />

OF QUATERNARY ALKYLAMMONIUM SULFOBETAINES TO DAPHNIA MAGNA. Joanna<br />

Davies, Robert S. Ward, Geoffrey Hodges, and David W. Roberts........................................... 2111–2115.<br />

TOXICITY OF PERFLUOROOCTANE SULFONIC ACID AND PERFLUOROOCTANOIC ACID TO<br />

CHIRONOMUS TENTANS. Michelle M. MacDonald, Amanda L. Warne, Naomi L. Stock, Scott A.<br />

Mabury, Keith R. Solomon, and Paul K. Sibley.......................................................................... 2116–2123.<br />

USE OF POW<strong>DE</strong>RED COCONUT CHARCOAL AS A TOXICITY I<strong>DE</strong>NTIFICATION AND<br />

EVALUATION MANIPULATION FOR ORGANIC TOXICANTS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS. Kay T.<br />

21


Ho, Robert M. Burgess, <strong>Mar</strong>guerite C. Pelletier, Jonathan R. Serbst, Howard Cook, <strong>Mar</strong>k G.<br />

Cantwell, Stephen A. Ryba, Monique M. Perron, Jon Lebo, James Huckins, and Jimmie Petty 2124–2131.<br />

DIFFERENTIAL TOLERANCE AMONG CRYPTIC SPECIES: A POTENTIAL CAUSE OF<br />

POLLUTANT-RELATED REDUCTIONS IN GENETIC DIVERSITY. Axayácatl Rocha-Olivares,<br />

John W. Fleeger, and David W. Foltz......................................................................................... 2132–2137.<br />

METHYLMERCURY UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION KINETICS IN SHEEPSHEAD MINNOWS,<br />

CYPRINODON VARIEGATUS, AFTER EXPOSURE TO CH3Hg-SPIKED FOOD. Joy J. Leaner<br />

and Robert P. Mason.................................................................................................................. 2138–2146.<br />

SHORTCOMINGS OF THE LABORATORY-<strong>DE</strong>RIVED MEDIAN LETHAL CONCENTRATION<br />

FOR PREDICTING MORTALITY IN FIELD POPULATIONS: EXPOSURE DURATION AND<br />

LATENT MORTALITY. Yuan Zhao and Michael C. Newman .................................................... 2147–2153.<br />

PERFORMANCE OF DIFFUSION GRADIENT IN THIN FILMS TO EVALUATE THE TOXIC<br />

FRACTION OF COPPER TO DAPHNIA MAGNA. <strong>Mar</strong>ie-Hélène Tusseau-Vuillemin, Rodolphe<br />

Gilbin, Estelle Bakkaus, and Jeanne Garric ............................................................................... 2154–2161.<br />

EFFECTS OF TRICHLOROETHYLENE AND PERCHLOROETHYLENE ON WILD RO<strong>DE</strong>NTS AT<br />

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, CALIFORNIA, USA. Sarah E. Spring, A. Keith Miles, and Michael<br />

J. An<strong>de</strong>rson................................................................................................................................. 2162–2169.<br />

PESTICI<strong>DE</strong>S IN MOUNTAIN YELLOW-LEGGED FROGS (RANA MUSCOSA) FROM THE<br />

SIERRA NEVADA MOUNTAINS OF CALIFORNIA, USA. Gary M. Fellers, Laura L. McConnell,<br />

David Pratt, and Seema Datta.................................................................................................... 2170–2177.<br />

ASSESSMENT OF MACROBENTHOS RESPONSE TO SEDIMENT CONTAMINATION IN THE<br />

SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY, CALIFORNIA, USA. Bruce Thompson and Sarah Lowe.......... 2178–2187.<br />

AVOIDANCE TESTS WITH COLLEMBOLA AND EARTHWORMS AS EARLY SCREENING<br />

TOOLS FOR SITE-SPECIFIC ASSESSMENT OF POLLUTED SOILS. Tiago Natal da Luz, Rui<br />

Ribeiro, and José Paulo Sousa................................................................................................... 2188–2193.<br />

ESTROGENIC AND TOXIC EFFECTS OF METHOXYCHLOR ON ZEBRAFISH (DANIO RERIO).<br />

Bram J. Versonnen, Patrick Roose, Els M. Monteyne, and Colin R. Janssen........................... 2194–2201.<br />

RESPONSES OF PERIPHYTON AND INVERTEBRATES TO A TETRA<strong>DE</strong>CYL-PENTA<strong>DE</strong>CYL<br />

SULFATE MIXTURE IN STREAM MESOCOSMS. Scott E. Belanger, David M. Lee, John W.<br />

Bowling, and Ellen M. LeBlanc................................................................................................... 2202–2213.<br />

INDUCTION OF ARYL HYDROCARBON RECEPTOR–MEDIATED AND ESTROGEN<br />

RECEPTOR–MEDIATED ACTIVITIES, AND MODULATION OF CELL PROLIFERATION BY<br />

DINAPHTHOFURANS. Jan Vondráek, Kateina Chramostová, <strong>Mar</strong>tina Plíšková, Ludk Bláha,<br />

Werner Brack, Alois Kozubík, and Miroslav Machala................................................................. 2214–2220.<br />

ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF NICKEL TO RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS<br />

MYKISS). Kevin V. Brix, James Keithly, David K. DeForest, and Jim Laughlin......................... 2221–2228.<br />

ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF FIVE SELECTIVE SEROTONIN REUPTAKE INHIBITORS<br />

IN CERIODAPHNIA DUBIA. Theodore B. Henry, Jeong-Wook Kwon, Kevin L. Armbrust, and<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>sha C. Black.......................................................................................................................... 2229–2233.<br />

WASTEWATER TREATMENT POLYMERS I<strong>DE</strong>NTIFIED AS THE TOXIC COMPONENT OF A<br />

DIAMOND MINE EFFLUENT. Simone J.C. <strong>de</strong> Rosemond and Karsten Liber .......................... 2234–2242.<br />

TOXICITY OF WI<strong>DE</strong>-RANGE POLARITY FRACTIONS FROM WOOD SMOKE AND DIESEL<br />

EXHAUST PARTICULATE OBTAINED USING HOT PRESSURIZED WATER. Alena Kubátová,<br />

Tamara S. Steckler, John R. Gallagher, Steven B. Hawthorne, and Matthew J. Picklo, Sr....... 2243–2250.<br />

EFFECT OF GRASSES ON HERBICI<strong>DE</strong> FATE IN THE SOIL COLUMN: INFILTRATION OF<br />

RUNOFF, MOVEMENT, AND <strong>DE</strong>GRADATION. Jason B. Bel<strong>de</strong>n and Joel R. Coats............... 2251–2258.<br />

HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT<br />

A BAYESIAN APPROACH TO PARAMETER ESTIMATION FOR A CRAYFISH (PROCAMBARUS<br />

SPP.) BIOACCUMULATION MO<strong>DE</strong>L. Hsin-I Lin, David W. Berzins, Leann Myers, William J.<br />

George, Assaf Ab<strong>de</strong>lghani, and Karen H. Watanabe................................................................. 2259–2266.<br />

DYNAMIC IN-STREAM FATE MO<strong>DE</strong>LING OF XENOBIOTIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS: A CASE<br />

STUDY OF LINEAR ALKYLBENZENE SULFONATES IN THE LAMBRO RIVER, ITALY. Tolessa<br />

Deksissa, Dirk De Pauw, and Peter A. Vanrolleghem................................................................ 2267–2278.<br />

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 8, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Evaluation of the pollution of the surface waters of Greece from the priority compounds of List II,<br />

76/464/EEC Directive, and other toxic compounds • .................................................................... 995-1007<br />

22


Themistokles Lekkas, George Kolokythas, Anastasia Nikolaou, <strong>Mar</strong>ia Kostopoulou, Anna Kotrikla,<br />

Georgia Gatidou, Nikolaos S. Thomaidis, Spyros Golfinopoulos, Christina Makri, Damianos Babos<br />

et al.<br />

Characterization of heavy metal particles embed<strong>de</strong>d in tire dust • ............................................. 1009-1017<br />

Kouji Adachi and Yoshiaki Tainosho<br />

Metal and metallothionein level in the heat-treated cytosol of gills of transplanted mussels Mytilus<br />

galloprovincialis Lmk • ................................................................................................................. 1019-1025<br />

Zrinka Dragun, <strong>Mar</strong>ijana Erk, Biserka Raspor, Duica Ivankovi and Jasenka Pavii<br />

Health risk assessment of PCDD/F emissions from a hazardous and medical waste incinerator in<br />

Turkey • ....................................................................................................................................... 1027-1038<br />

Aykan Kara<strong>de</strong>mir<br />

Statistical comparison and correlation of zinc and lead in estuarine sediments along the western<br />

coast of Mauritius • ...................................................................................................................... 1039-1044<br />

Roshan T. Ramessur<br />

Predicting CO2 and SO2 emissions in the Baltic States through reorganization of energy<br />

infrastructure • ............................................................................................................................. 1045-1053<br />

Gintaras Denafas, Denisas Sitnikovas, Arvydas Galinis, Ivars Kudrenickis, Gaidis Klavs and Rein<br />

Kuusik<br />

Evaluation of mixture effects in a cru<strong>de</strong> extract of compost using the CALUX bioassay and HPLC<br />

fractionation • .............................................................................................................................. 1055-1066<br />

Go Suzuki, Hi<strong>de</strong>taka Takigami, Yasunori Kushi and Shin-ichi Sakai<br />

Relationship between fluorine in drinking water and <strong>de</strong>ntal health of resi<strong>de</strong>nts in some large cities<br />

in China • ..................................................................................................................................... 1067-1073<br />

Binbin Wang, Baoshan Zheng, Cheng Zhai, Guangqian Yu and Xiaojing Liu<br />

Emission mo<strong>de</strong>lling and validation of VOCs' source strengths in air-conditioned office premises<br />

• .................................................................................................................................................. 1075-1088<br />

K. W. Tham, M. S. Zuraimi and S. C. Sekhar<br />

Levels of elements in the surficial estuarine sediments of the Hugli River, northeast India and their<br />

environmental implications • ....................................................................................................... 1089-1098<br />

Santosh Kumar Sarkar, Stanislav Frančišković-Bilinski, Asokkumar Bhattacharya, Mahua Saha<br />

and Halka Bilinski<br />

Different methodologies to quantify uncertainties of air emissions • .......................................... 1099-1107<br />

Daniela Romano, Antonella Bernetti and Riccardo De Lauretis<br />

Air pollution and the <strong>de</strong>mand for hospital services: a review • REVIEW .................................... 1109-1118<br />

Adam M. Wilson, Jeffrey C. Salloway, Cameron P. Wake and Tom Kelly<br />

The ecological effects of trichloroacetic acid in the environment • REVIEW .............................. 1119-1150<br />

T. E. Lewis, T. F. Wolfinger and M. L. Barta<br />

Assessing wastewater toxicity to activated sludge: recent research and <strong>de</strong>velopments •.......... 1151-1164<br />

Shijin Ren<br />

Risk and Uncertainty in Environmental and Resource Economics: Edited by Justus Wesseler,<br />

Hans-Peter Weikard and Robet D. Weaver, Published by Edward Elgar • 1165-1166<br />

Phoebe Koundouri<br />

SummaryPlus | Full Text + Links | PDF (75 K)<br />

16.<br />

Environmental and Technology Policy in Europe—Technological Innovation and Policy Integration:<br />

Edited by Geerten J.I. Schrama abd Sabine Sedlacek, 2003 • BOOK REVIEW<br />

Pages 1166-1167<br />

D. Bauknecht<br />

ESTUARIES:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

PARKER MAC CREADY. Toward a Unified Theory of Tidally-Averaged Estuarine Salinity<br />

Structure 561<br />

P.REGNIER AND J.P. O’KANE. On the Mixing Processes in Estuaries: The Fractional Freshwater<br />

Method Revisited .............................................................................................................................. 571<br />

YING WU,JING ZHANG,KI WOONG CHO, GI HOON HONG, AND CHANG SOO CHUNG. Origin<br />

and Transport of Sedimentary Organic Matter in the Yalujiang Estuary, North China........................ 583<br />

23


ALBERTO VIEIRA BORGES,JEAN-PIERRE VAN<strong>DE</strong>RBORGHT, LAURE-SOPHIE<br />

SCHIETTECATTE, FRÉDÉRIC GAZEAU,SARAH FERRÓN-SMITH,BRUNO <strong>DE</strong>LILLE, AND<br />

MICHEL RANKIGNOULLE Variability of the Gas Transfer Velocity of CO2 in a Macrotidal Estuary<br />

(The Scheldt............................................................................................................................................ 593<br />

JAMES H. MCKENNA. DOC Dynamics in a Small Temperate Estuary: Simultaneous Addition and<br />

Removal Processes and Implications on Observed Nonconservative Behavior ................................. 604<br />

SHERRI RUMER COOPER, SUNGHEA KIM MACGLOTHLIN, MICHAEL MADRITCH, AND<br />

DANIEL L.JONES. Paleoecological Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of Human Impacts on then Neuse and Pamlico<br />

Estuaries of North Carolina, USA ....................................................................................................... 617<br />

JAMES D. HAGY,WALTER R.BOYTON,CAROLYN W.KEEFE, AND KATHRYN V. WOOD.<br />

Hypoxia in Chesapeake Bay, 1950-2001: Long-term Change in Relation to Nutrient loading and<br />

River Flow .............................................................................................................................................. 634<br />

THOMAS P. HURST, KIM A. MCKOWN, AND DAVID O. CONOVER. Interannual and Long-term<br />

Variation in the Nearshore Fish Community of <strong>de</strong> Mesohaline Hudson River estuary ........................... 659<br />

CARRIE B. HIGIBOTHAM, MERRYL ALBER, AND ALICE G. CHALMERS, Analysis of Tidal<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>sh Vegetation Patterns in Two Georgia Estuaries Using Aerial Photography and GIS................. 670<br />

ELIZABETH BURKE WATSON. Changing Elevation, Accretion , and Tidal <strong>Mar</strong>sh Plant<br />

Assemblages in a South San Francisco Bay Tidal <strong>Mar</strong>sh..................................................................... 684<br />

EILLEN P. VISSER,P. SEAN MACDONALD, AND DAVID A. ARMSTRONG. The Impact of Yellow<br />

Shore Crabs, Hemigrapsus oregonensis, on Early Benthic Phase Dungeness Crab, Cancer<br />

magister, in Intertidal Oyster Shell Mitigation Habitat............................................................................ 699<br />

MAJBRITT FISCHER LASSEN, METTE ELISABETH BRAMM, KATHERINE RICHARDSON,<br />

FATIMAH YUSHOFF, AND MUHAMED SHARIFF. Phytoplankton Community Composition and<br />

Size Distribution in the Langat River Estuary , Malaysia........................................................................ 716<br />

S.M.CRINALL AND J.S. HIN<strong>DE</strong>LL. Assessing the Use of Saltmarsh Flats by Fish in a Temperata<br />

Australian Embayment........................................................................................................................ 728<br />

LESA MENG, GIANCARLO CICCHETTI, AND MARNITA CHINTALA, Nekton Habitat Quality at<br />

Shallow Water Sites in Two Island Coastal Systems............................................................................. 740<br />

FISH AND FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 3, No. 4, December 2002.<br />

The impact of subsidies upon fisheries management and sustainability: the case of the North<br />

Atlantic...............................................................................................................................................233-250<br />

Gordon Munro, Ussif R Sumaila<br />

The relationship between fishing methods, fisheries management and the estimation of maximum<br />

sustainable yield ................................................................................................................................251-260<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k N Maun<strong>de</strong>r<br />

Reconciling traditional inland fisheries management and sustainability in industrialized countries,<br />

with emphasis on Europe...................................................................................................................261-316<br />

Robert Arlinghaus, Thomas Mehner, Ian G Cowx, Ghoti<br />

Estimating illegal and unreported catches from marine ecosystems: a basis for change.................317-339<br />

Tony J Pitcher, Reg Watson, Robyn Forrest, Hreiðar Þór Valtýsson, Sylvie Guénette<br />

By-catch begone: changes in the philosophy of fishing technology..................................................340-355<br />

Steven J Kennelly, Matt K Broadhurst, Conference Report<br />

Conference summary: the ‘new’ emerging economics of marine protected areas............................356-359<br />

Book Review<br />

Fishes in Estuaries.............................................................................................................................360-361<br />

Migration of Freshwater Fishes..........................................................................................................361-362<br />

Protecting the Commons: A Framework for Resource Management in the Americas......................362-362<br />

Fish Behaviour in the Aquarium and in the Wild................................................................................362-363<br />

The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of the World..........................................364-364<br />

Right Whales: Worldwi<strong>de</strong> Status (The Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, Special<br />

Issue 2) .............................................................................................................................................364-365<br />

Advances in <strong>Mar</strong>ine Biology, Vol. 40.................................................................................................366-366<br />

Salmonid Fishes: Population Biology, Genetics and Management (Fish and Aquatic Resources<br />

Series 2) ............................................................................................................................................366-366<br />

Island in the Stream: Oceanography and Fisheries of the Charleston Bump (AFS Symposium 25) 366-366<br />

Innovations in Fish Passage Technology..........................................................................................366-366<br />

24


Management and Ecology of River Fisheries....................................................................................366-366<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 1, January <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Alonzo, Suzanne H., and <strong>Mar</strong>c Mangel...................................................................................................1-13<br />

The effects of size-selective fisheries on the stock dynamics of and sperm limitation in sexchanging<br />

fish<br />

Baba, Katsuhisa, Toshifumi Kawajiri, Yasuhiro Kuwahara, and Shigeru Nakao...................................14-24<br />

An environmentally based growth mo<strong>de</strong>l that uses finite difference calculus with maximum<br />

likelihood method: its application to the brackish water bivalve Corbicula japonica in Lake Abashiri,<br />

Japan<br />

Bro<strong>de</strong>ur, Rick D., Joseph P. Fisher, David J. Teel, Robert L. Emmett, Edmundo Casillas and Todd<br />

W. Miller.................................................................................................................................................25-46<br />

Juvenile salmonid distribution, growth, condition, origin, and environmental and species<br />

associations in the Northern California Current<br />

Garcia-Rodriguez, Francisco J. and David Aurioles-Gamboa...............................................................47-62<br />

Spatial and temporal variation in the diet of the California sea lion (Za/ophus ca/ifornianus) in the<br />

Gulf of California, Mexico<br />

Jung, Sukgeun, and Edward D. Hou<strong>de</strong> .................................................................................................63-77<br />

Recruitment and spawning-stock biomass distribution of bay anchovy (Anchoa mitchi//i) in<br />

Chesapeake Bay<br />

Kellison, Todd G., and David B. Eggleston ...........................................................................................78-93<br />

Coupling ecology and economy: mo<strong>de</strong>ling optimal release scenarios for summer floun<strong>de</strong>r<br />

(Para/ichthys <strong>de</strong>ntatus) stock enhancement<br />

Kritzer, Jacob P. ..................................................................................................................................94-107<br />

Sex-specific growth and mortality, spawning season, and female maturation of the stripey bass<br />

(Lutjanus carponotatus) on the Great Barrrier Reef<br />

Orr, Anthony J., Adria S. Banks, Steve Mellman, Harriet R. Huber, Robert L. DeLong, and Robin<br />

F. Brown.............................................................................................................................................108-117<br />

Examination of the foraging habits of Pacific harbor seal (Phoca vitulina richardsi) to <strong>de</strong>scribe their<br />

useof the Umpqua River, Oregon, and their predation on salmonids<br />

Park, Wongyu, R. Ian Perry, and Sung Yun Hong.............................................................................118-126<br />

Larval <strong>de</strong>velopment of the si<strong>de</strong>striped shrimp (Pandalopsis dispor Rathbun) (Crustacea,<br />

Decapoda, Pandalidae)<br />

Pearson, Donald E., and Franklin R. Shaw.......................................................................................127-141<br />

Sources of age <strong>de</strong>termination errors for sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbrio)<br />

Powell, Allyn B., Robin T. Cheshire, Elisabeth H. Laban, James Colvocoresses, Patrick O'Donnell,<br />

and <strong>Mar</strong>ie Davidian............................................................................................................................142-155<br />

Growth, mortality, and hatchdate distributions of larval and juvenile spotted seatrout (Cynoscion<br />

nebulosus) in Florida Bay, Evergla<strong>de</strong>s National Park<br />

Santana, Francisco M., and Rosangela Lessa..................................................................................156-167<br />

Age <strong>de</strong>termination and growth of the night shark (Carcharhinus signatus) off the northeastern<br />

Brazilian coast<br />

Smith, Keith R., David A. Somerton, Mei-Sun Yang, and Daniel G. Nichol ......................................168-178<br />

Distribution and biology of prowfish (Zaprora silenus) in the northeast Pacific<br />

Ward, Peter, Ransom A. Myers, and Wa<strong>de</strong> Blanchard.....................................................................179-195<br />

Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches<br />

Watanabe, Chikako, and Akihiko Yatsu.............................................................................................196-206<br />

Effects of <strong>de</strong>nsity-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce and sea surface temperature on interannual variation in length-atage<br />

of chub mackerel (Scomber japonicus) in the Kuroshio-Oyashio area during 1970-1997<br />

Notes<br />

Llanos-Rivera, Alejandra, and Leonardo R. Castro...........................................................................207-212<br />

Latitudinal and seasonal egg-size variation of the anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) off the Chilean<br />

coast<br />

Purcell, Maureen, Greg Mackey, Eric LaHood, Harriet Huber, and Linda Park ...............................213-220<br />

Molecular methods for the genetic i<strong>de</strong>ntification of salmonid prey from Pacific harbor seal (Phoca<br />

vitulina richardsi)<br />

25


Weng, Kevin C., and Barbara A. Block..............................................................................................221-229<br />

Diej vertical migration of the bigeye thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus), a species possessing<br />

orbital retia mirabilia<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 2, April <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Archer, Fre<strong>de</strong>rick, Tim Gerro<strong>de</strong>tte, Susan Chivers, and Alan Jackson.............................................233-244<br />

Annual estimates of the unobserved inci<strong>de</strong>ntal kill of pantropical spotted dolphin (Stevella<br />

attenuate ottenuata) calves in the tuna purse-seine fishery of the eastern tropical Pacific<br />

Chernova, Natalia V., and David L. Stein..........................................................................................245-250<br />

A remarkable new species of Psednos (Teleostei: Liparidae) from the western North Atlantic<br />

Ocean<br />

Chiang, Wei-Chuan, Chi-Lu Sun, Su-Zan Yeh, and Wei-Cheng Su..................................................251-263<br />

Age and growth of sailfish (/stiophorus p/atypterus) in waters off eastern Taiwan<br />

Clark, Randall D., John D. Christensen, and <strong>Mar</strong>k E. Monaco, Philip A. Caldwell, Geoffrey A.<br />

Matthews, and Thomas J. Minello.....................................................................................................264-277<br />

A habitat-use mo<strong>de</strong>l to <strong>de</strong>termine essential fish habitat for juvenile brown shrimp<br />

(Forfantepenaeus aztecus) in Galveston Bay, Texas<br />

Delgado, Gabriel A., Claudine T. Bartels, Robert A. Glazer, Nancy J. Brown-Peterson, and Kevin<br />

J. McCarthy........................................................................................................................................278-288<br />

Translocation as a strategy to rehabilitate the queen conch (Strombus gigas) population in the<br />

Florida Keys<br />

Lage, Christopher, Kristen Kuhn, and Irv Kornfield...........................................................................289-297<br />

Genetic differentiation among Atlantic cod (Godusmorhua) from Browns Bank, Georges Bank,and<br />

Nantucket Shoals<br />

Lenihan, Hunter S., and Charles H. Peterson...................................................................................298-305<br />

Conserving oyster reef habitat by switching from dredging and tonging to diver-harvesting<br />

Macewicz, Beverly J., John R. Hunter, Nancy C. H. Lo, and Erin L. LaCasella ...............................306-327<br />

Fecundity, egg <strong>de</strong>position, and mortality of market squid (Lo/i/go opa/escens)<br />

Orr, James W., and James E. Blackburn...........................................................................................328-348<br />

The dusky rockfishes (Teleostei: Socrpaeniformes) of the North Pacific Ocean:<br />

resurrection of Sebastes variabi/is (Pallas, 1814) and a re<strong>de</strong>scription of Sebastes ci/iatus (Tilesius,<br />

1813)<br />

Powers, Joseph E. ............................................................................................................................349-365<br />

Recruitment as an evolving random process of aggregation and mortality<br />

Szedlmayer, Stephen T., and Jason D. Lee......................................................................................366-375<br />

Diet shifts of juvenile red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) with changes in habitat and fish size<br />

Webb, Stacey, and Ronald T. Kneib..................................................................................................376-388<br />

Individual growth rates and movement of juvenile white shrimp (Litopenaeussetiferus) in a tidal<br />

marsh nursery<br />

Forsythe, John, Nuutti Kangas, and Roger T. Hanlon.......................................................................389-392<br />

Does the California market squid (Lo/igo opa/escens) spawn naturally during the day or at night?<br />

A note on the successful use of ROVs to obtain basic fisheries biology data<br />

Kotas, Jorge E., Silvio dos Santos, Venancio G. <strong>de</strong> Azevedo, Berenice M. G. Gallo, and Paulo C.<br />

R. Barata............................................................................................................................................393-399<br />

Inci<strong>de</strong>ntal capture of loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and leatherback (Dermoche/ys coriacea) sea<br />

turtles by the pelagic longline fishery off southern Brazil<br />

Yang, Mei-Sun...................................................................................................................................400-405<br />

Diet changes of Pacific cod (Gadus macrocepha/us) in Pavlof Bay associated with climate<br />

changes in the Gulf of Alaska between 1980 and 1995<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 3, July <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Abascal, Francisco J., Cesar Megina, and Antonio Medina .............................................................407-417<br />

Testicular <strong>de</strong>velopment in migrant and spawning bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus (L.)) from the<br />

eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean<br />

Bobko, Stephen J., and Steven A. Berkeley......................................................................................418-429<br />

26


Maturity, ovarian cycle, fecundity, and age-specific parturition of black rockfish (Sebastes<br />

me/anops)<br />

Brock, Daniel J., and Timothy M. Ward.............................................................................................430-440<br />

Maori octopus (Octopus maorum) bycatch and southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) mortality in<br />

the South Australian lobster fishery<br />

Dawson, Stephen, Elisabeth Slooten, Sam DuFresne, Paul Wa<strong>de</strong>, and Deanna Clement..............441-451<br />

Small-boat surveys for coastal dolphins: line-transect surveys for Hector's dolphins<br />

(Cepha/orhynchus hectori)<br />

Laidig, Thomas E., Keith M. Sakuma, and Jason A. Stannard .........................................................452-463<br />

Description and growth of larval and pelagic juvenile pygmy rockfish (Sebastes wi/soni) (family<br />

Sebastidae)<br />

McGarvey, Richard............................................................................................................................464-472<br />

Estimating the emigration rate of fish stocks from marine sanctuaries using tag-recovery data<br />

Roumillat, William A., and Myra C. Brouwer Reproductive dynamics of female spotted seatrout<br />

(Cynoscion nebu/osus) in South Carolina<br />

Taggart, S. James, Charles E. O'Clair, Thomas C. Shirley, and Jennifer Mondragon......................488-497<br />

Estimating Dungeness crab (Cancer magister) abundance: crab pots and dive transects compared<br />

Tollit, Dominic J., Susan G. Heaslip, Tonya K. Zeppelin, Ruth Joy, Katherine A. Call, and Andrew<br />

W. Trites.............................................................................................................................................498-508<br />

A method to improve size estimates of walleye pollock (Theragra cha/cogromma) and Atka<br />

mackerel (P/eurogrammus monopterygius) consumed by pinnipeds: digestion correction factors<br />

applied to bones and otoliths recovered in scats<br />

Zeppelin, Tonya K., Dominic J. Tollit, Katherine A. Call, Trevor J. Orchard, and Carolyn J.<br />

Gudmundson......................................................................................................................................509-521<br />

Sizes of walleye pollock (Theragra cha/cogromma) and Atka mackerel<br />

(P/eurogrammus monopterygius) consumed by the western stock of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias<br />

jubatus) in Alaska from 1999 to 2000<br />

Tollit, Dominic J., Susan G. Heaslip, and Andrew W. Trites..............................................................522-532<br />

Sizes of walleye pollock (Theragra cha/cogramma) consumed by the eastern stock of Steller sea<br />

lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Southeast Alaska from 1994 to 1999<br />

Tremain, Derek M., Christopher W. Harn<strong>de</strong>n, and Douglas H. Adams.............................................533-544<br />

Multidirectional movements of sportfish species between an estuarine no-take zone and<br />

surrounding waters of the Indian River Lagoon, Florida<br />

Wells, R. J. David, and Jay R. Rooker...............................................................................................545-554<br />

Distribution, age, and growth of young-of-the year greater amberjack (Se/iota dumerili) associated<br />

with pelagic Sargassum<br />

Hiroishi, Shingo, Yasutaka Yuki, Eriko Yuruzume, Yosuke Onishi, Tomoli Ikeda, Hironobu Komaki,<br />

and Muneo Okiyama..........................................................................................................................555-560<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification of formalin-preserved eggs of red sea bream (Pagrus major) (Pisces: Sparidae)<br />

using monoclonal antibodies<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 6, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Introduction ..............................................................................................................................................369<br />

David Emerson<br />

Diversity of Ferrous Iron-Oxidizing, Nitrate-Reducing Bacteria and their Involvement in Oxygen-<br />

In<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt Iron Cycling..........................................................................................................................371<br />

Kristina Straub; Wilhelm Schber; Berit Buchholz-Cleven; Bernhard Schink<br />

Potential for Microscale Bacterial Fe Redox Cycling at the Aerobic-Anaerobic Interface........................379<br />

Eric Ro<strong>de</strong>n; Dmitri Sobolev; Brian Glazer; George Luther<br />

Neutrophilic Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria in the Ocean: Their Habitats, Diversity, and Roles in Mineral<br />

Deposition, Rock Alteration, and Biomass Production in the Deep-Sea..................................................393<br />

Katrina Edwards; Wolfgang Bach; Thomas McCollom; Daniel Rogers<br />

Bacterial Iron Oxidation in Circumneutral Freshwater Habitats: Findings from the Field and the<br />

Laboratory.................................................................................................................................................405<br />

David Emerson; Johanna Weiss<br />

Four-Hundred-and-Ninety-Million-Year Record of Bacteriogenic Iron Oxi<strong>de</strong> Precipitation at Sea-<br />

Floor Hydrothermal Vents.........................................................................................................................415<br />

27


Crispin Little; Sarah Glynn; Rachel Mills<br />

Further Readings in Geomicrobiology......................................................................................................431<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 3, May 2003.<br />

A tribute to Clau<strong>de</strong> Shannon (1916–2001) and a plea for more rigorous use of species richness,<br />

species diversity and the ‘Shannon–Wiener’ In<strong>de</strong>x<br />

Spellerberg I.F.; Fedor P.J.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .........................................................177-179(3)<br />

Diversity at hydrothermal vents<br />

Tsurumi M.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .......................................................181-190(10)<br />

Global synthesis of leaf area in<strong>de</strong>x observations: implications for ecological and remote sensing<br />

studies<br />

Asner G.P.; Scurlock J.M.O.; A. Hicke J.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .......................................................191-205(15)<br />

A retrospective analysis of land cover change using a polygon shape in<strong>de</strong>x<br />

Comber A.J.; Birnie R.V.; Hodgson M.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .........................................................207-215(9)<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>rn and ancient olive stands near Sagalassos (south-west Turkey) and reconstruction of the<br />

ancient agricultural landscape in two valleys<br />

Vermoere M.; Vanhecke L.; Waelkens M.; Smets E.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .......................................................217-235(19)<br />

Colonization front of the un<strong>de</strong>rstorey palm Astrocaryum sciophilum in a pristine rain forest of<br />

French Guiana<br />

Charles-dominique P.; Chave J.; Dubois M.-A.; De Granville J-J.; Riera B.; Vezzoli C.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .......................................................237-248(12)<br />

Climate-driven changes in shoot <strong>de</strong>nsity and shoot biomass in Leymus chinensis (Poaceae) on<br />

the North-east China Transect (NECT)<br />

Renzhong W.; Qiong G.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .......................................................249-259(11)<br />

Dispersal: from bacteria to vertebrates<br />

Eriksson O.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .........................................................261-262(2)<br />

Melanesia's birds, by its great evolutionary biogeographers<br />

Dutson G.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .........................................................262-263(2)<br />

Conservation of Exploited Species — To be or not to be!<br />

Edwards S.R.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, May 2003, vol. 12, iss. 3, .........................................................263-264(2)<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 5, September 2003.<br />

Predicting the impacts of climate change on the distribution of species: are bioclimate envelope<br />

mo<strong>de</strong>ls useful?<br />

Pearson R.G.; Dawson T.P.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ............................................361-371(11)<br />

Dispersal and the interspecific abundance-occupancy relationship in British birds<br />

Gaston K.J.; Blackburn T.M.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................373-379(7)<br />

Body size and area-inci<strong>de</strong>nce relationships: is there a general pattern?<br />

Bie<strong>de</strong>rmann R.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................381-387(7)<br />

Latitudinal and altitudinal body size variation among north-west European land snail species<br />

Hausdorf B.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................389-394(6)<br />

Distinguishing between signal and noise in faunal responses to environmental change<br />

Fleishman E.; Mac Nally R.<br />

28


Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................395-402(8)<br />

Uphill shifts in distribution of butterflies in the Czech Republic: effects of changing climate <strong>de</strong>tected<br />

on a regional scale<br />

Konvicka M.; <strong>Mar</strong>adova M.; Benes J.; Fric Z.; Kepka P.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................403-410(8)<br />

The Early Holocene treeline in the southern French Alps: new evi<strong>de</strong>nce from travertine formations<br />

Ali A.A.; Carcaillet C.; Guendon J-L.; Quinif Y.; Roiron P.; Terral J-F.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................411-419(9)<br />

Broad-scale reciprocity in an avian seed dispersal mutualism<br />

Burns K.C.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................421-426(6)<br />

Passive internal transport of aquatic organisms by waterfowl in Doñana, south-west Spain<br />

Figuerola J.; Green A.J.; Santamaría L.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ............................................427-436(10)<br />

The Conservation Status of Chamaleo Chamaeleon in Southern Spain<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................437-438(2)<br />

Columnar Cactus Evolution and Ecology<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................438-438(1)<br />

A Balanced Synthesis of Peatland Research<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September 2003, vol. 12, iss. 5, ..............................................438-439(2)<br />

Six types of species-area curves<br />

Scheiner S.M.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 6, November 2003.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, ...............................................441-447(7)<br />

Elevational gradients of small mammal diversity on the northern slopes of Mt. Qilian, China<br />

Li J.S.; Song Y.L.; Zeng Z.G.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, .............................................449-460(12)<br />

Does climate <strong>de</strong>termine broad-scale patterns of species richness? A test of the causal link by<br />

natural experiment<br />

H-Acevedo D.; Currie D.J.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, .............................................461-473(13)<br />

Relative influences of current and historical factors on mammal and bird diversity patterns in<br />

<strong>de</strong>glaciated North America<br />

Hawkins B.A.; Porter E.E.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, ...............................................475-481(7)<br />

Are there latitudinal gradients in species turnover?<br />

Koleff P.; Lennon J.J.; Gaston K.J.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, .............................................483-498(16)<br />

Environmental variability and biogeography: the relationship between bathymetric distribution and<br />

geographical range size in marine algae and gastropods<br />

Harley C.D.G.; Smith K.F.; Moore V.L.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, ...............................................499-506(8)<br />

The bioclimatic mo<strong>de</strong>l: a method of palaeoclimatic qualitative inference based on mammal<br />

associations<br />

Fernán<strong>de</strong>z M.H.; Peláez-Campomanes P.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, .............................................507-517(11)<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling differential extinctions to un<strong>de</strong>rstand big cat distribution on Indonesian islands<br />

Wilkinson D.M.; O'Regan H.J.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, ...............................................519-524(6)<br />

Ecology in a Nutshell<br />

Engel E.C.; Weltzin J.F.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, November 2003, vol. 12, iss. 6, ...............................................525-526(2)<br />

Regional scale relationships between ecosystem structure and functioning: the case of the<br />

Patagonian steppes<br />

José M. Paruelo; Rodolfo A. Golluscio; Juan Pablo Guerschman; Ariela Cesa; Varinia V. Jouve;<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tín F. Garbulsky<br />

29


GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ............................................385-395(11)<br />

Trends in aquatic macrophyte species turnover in Northern Ireland — which factors <strong>de</strong>termine the<br />

spatial distribution of local species turnover?<br />

Einar Heegaard<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ............................................397-408(12)<br />

Environmental control of flowering periodicity in Costa Rican and Mexican tropical dry forests<br />

Rolf Borchert; Stefanie A. Meyer; Richard S. Felger; Luciana Porter-Bolland<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ............................................409-425(17)<br />

Potential effects of climate change on plant species in the Faroe Islands<br />

Anna <strong>Mar</strong>ia Fosaa; <strong>Mar</strong>tin T. Sykes; Jonas E. Lawesson; Magnus Gaard<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ............................................427-437(11)<br />

Geographic range and body size in Neotropical marsupials<br />

N. Olifiers; M. V. Vieira; C. E. V. Grelle<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................439-444(6)<br />

The portability of foodweb dynamics: reassembling an Australian eucalypt–psyllid–bird association<br />

within California<br />

Julie L. Lockwood; James J. Gilroy<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................445-450(6)<br />

Bird diversity along elevational gradients in the An<strong>de</strong>s of Colombia: area and mass effects<br />

Gustavo H. Kattan; Padu Franco<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................451-458(8)<br />

Biological correlates of <strong>de</strong>scription date in carnivores and primates<br />

Ben Collen; Andy Purvis; John L. Gittleman<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................459-467(9)<br />

Bioclimate envelope mo<strong>de</strong>ls: what they <strong>de</strong>tect and what they hi<strong>de</strong><br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................469-471(3)<br />

Bioclimate envelope mo<strong>de</strong>ls: what they <strong>de</strong>tect and what they hi<strong>de</strong> — response to Hampe (<strong>2004</strong>)<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................471-473(3)<br />

Species accumulation and species area curves — a comment on Scheiner (2003)<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................473-476(4)<br />

Emerging consensus on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning<br />

Global Ecology & Biogeography, September <strong>2004</strong>, vol. 13, iss. 5, ..............................................477-477(1)<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 5, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Herring as a major consumer in the Norwegian Sea .......................................................................739-751<br />

Are Dommasnes, Webjørn Melle, Padmini Dalpadado and Bjørnar Ellertsen<br />

Variant colourations of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in Newfoundland and Labrador nearshore<br />

waters ............................................................................................................................................... 752-759<br />

Karen R. Gosse and Joseph S. Wroblewski<br />

Stock i<strong>de</strong>ntification of Mediterranean horse mackerel (Trachurus mediterraneus) using<br />

morphometric and meristic characters ..............................................................................................774-781<br />

Cemal Turan<br />

Survival of reared and wild Atlantic salmon smolts: size matters more in bad years ......................782-787<br />

I. Saloniemi, E. Jokikokko, I. Kallio-Nyberg, E. Jutila and P. Pasanen<br />

Fishing vs. natural recruitment variation in san<strong>de</strong>els as a cause of seabird breeding failure at<br />

Shetland: a mo<strong>de</strong>lling approach ......................................................................................................788-797<br />

Elvira S. Poloczanska, Robin M. Cook, Graeme D. Ruxton and Peter J. Wright<br />

Estimation of birthdates and catch-at-age using length frequency analysis (LFA), with application<br />

for skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) caught in the Southwest Atlantic •.................................... 798-811<br />

Humber A. Andra<strong>de</strong> and Paul G. Kinas<br />

Analysis of non-linear relationships between catch per unit effort and abundance in a tuna purseseine<br />

fishery simulated with artificial neural networks ......................................................................812-820<br />

Daniel Gaertner and Michel Dreyfus-Leon<br />

Estimating migration rates from two tag–release/one recovery experiments ..................................821-828<br />

30


Kunio Shirakihara and Shuichi Kitada<br />

An allozyme investigation of the stock structure of arrow squid Nototodarus gouldi (Cephalopoda:<br />

Ommastrephidae) from Australia ......................................................................................................829-835<br />

L. Triantafillos, G. D. Jackson, M. Adams and B. L. McGrath Steer<br />

Potential acoustic discrimination within boreal fish assemblages •................................................. 836-845<br />

Stéphane Gauthier and John K. Horne<br />

Water-mass formation and distribution in the Nordic Seas during the 1990s • ...............................846-863<br />

Johan Blindheim and Francisco Rey<br />

A mitochondrial DNA PCR–RFLP marker for population studies of the black scabbardfish<br />

(Aphanopus carbo) • ........................................................................................................................864-867<br />

Ricardo Quinta, Laurentina Gomes and Ana Teia dos Santos<br />

Simultaneous Sv and TS measurements on Young-of-the-Year (YOY) freshwater fish using three<br />

frequencies • ERRATUM..................................................................................................................868-869<br />

J. Guillard, A. Lebourges-Dhaussy and P. Brehmer<br />

INFOPESCA JOURNAL:<br />

No. 1, diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

COMPEAN-JIMENEZ, Guillermo; Ignacio Men<strong>de</strong>z-Gomez-Humaran e Ignacio Men<strong>de</strong>z-Ramirez<br />

Estimacion <strong>de</strong> la mortalidad inci<strong>de</strong>ntal <strong>de</strong> <strong>de</strong>lfines asociados a la pesca <strong>de</strong>l at-fin en Mexico....................5<br />

ALAYE-RAHY, Norma Ricardo Klimek-Gamasm y Luis Aparicio-Catalan. Diagnostico general <strong>de</strong><br />

la pesca y evaluacion <strong>de</strong> las especies <strong>de</strong> importancia comercial en la laguna <strong>de</strong> Coyuca,<br />

Guerrero, Mexico (1998-1999). ..................................................................................................................10<br />

HERNAN<strong>DE</strong>Z-COVARRUBIAS Vicente; Flor Delia Estrada-Navarrete; Victor I. Gonzalez-Gallardo;<br />

Alejandro Tome-Vazquez y David Ivan Chavez-Rivera. Deteccion <strong>de</strong>l virus <strong>de</strong> la mancha blanca<br />

(WSSV) en camaron blanco (Litopenaeus vannamei) <strong>de</strong> cultivo <strong>de</strong>l estado <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa...........................30<br />

SERRANO David y Evlin Ramirez-Felix Implementacion <strong>de</strong> un mo<strong>de</strong>lo<br />

hidrodinamico en el sistema lagunar <strong>de</strong> Santa <strong>Mar</strong>ia La Reforma, Sinaloa...............................................33<br />

PALLEIRO-NAYAR Julio Said; Ma. <strong>de</strong> Lour<strong>de</strong>s Salgado-Rogel; David Aguilar-Montero; Manuel<br />

Romero-<strong>Mar</strong>tinez. Analisis <strong>de</strong> la pesqueria <strong>de</strong>l erizo rojo (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus) en la<br />

costa norocci<strong>de</strong>ntal <strong>de</strong> Baja California, Mexico..........................................................................................40<br />

SALGADO-ROGEL, Ma. <strong>de</strong> Lour<strong>de</strong>s; Julio Said Palleiro-Nayar; David Aguilar-Montero; Manuel<br />

Romero-<strong>Mar</strong>tinez y Francisco J. <strong>Mar</strong>tinez-Garcia. Estudio comparativo <strong>de</strong> la abundancia <strong>de</strong> erizo<br />

rojo (Strongylocentrotus fi.anciscanus) en la costa norocci<strong>de</strong>ntal <strong>de</strong> la Peninsula <strong>de</strong> Baja<br />

California.....................................................................................................................................................46<br />

SOLANA-SANSORES, Rafael. Abundancia <strong>de</strong> objetos flotantes en el oceano Pacifico oriental y<br />

su relacion con la pesca (1983-1994).........................................................................................................54<br />

JIMENEZ-QUIROZ <strong>Mar</strong>ia <strong>de</strong>l Carmen y Rene <strong>Mar</strong>quez-Millan. Respuesta <strong>de</strong> la tortuga Lora<br />

(Lepidochelys kempi) a la temperatura <strong>de</strong>l aire y viento durante el <strong>de</strong>sove. .............................................63<br />

ROJAS-CARRILLO, Patricia M.' y Juan Francisco Barba-Torres3 Temperatura optima <strong>de</strong><br />

incubacion <strong>de</strong>l pescado blanco (Chirostoma estor) <strong>de</strong>l lago <strong>de</strong> Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico'..............67<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

The ED strategy: how species-level surrogates indicate general biodiversity patterns through an<br />

‘environmental diversity’ perspective<br />

D. P. Faith; S. Ferrier; P. A. Walker...............................................................................................1207-1217<br />

Should we use proportional sampling for species–area studies?<br />

José H. Schoere<strong>de</strong>r; Carla Galbiati; Carla R. Ribas; Tathiana G. Sobrinho; Carlos F. Sperber; Og<br />

DeSouza; Cristiano Lopes-Andra<strong>de</strong>..............................................................................................1219-1226<br />

The diversity of life-form type, habitat preference and phenology of the en<strong>de</strong>mics in the Goa region<br />

of the Western Ghats, India<br />

Vaishali C. Joshi; M. K. Janarthanam............................................................................................1227-1237<br />

Distribution of basic diploid and polyploid species of Isoetes in East Asia<br />

Xing Liu; Wahiti Robert Gituru; Qing-Feng Wang..........................................................................1239-1250<br />

Phylogeography of Trocho<strong>de</strong>ndron aralioi<strong>de</strong>s (Trocho<strong>de</strong>ndraceae) in Taiwan and its adjacent<br />

areas<br />

Shing-Fan Huang; Shih-Ying Hwang; Jenn-Che Wang; Tsan-Piao Lin........................................1251-1259<br />

31


Austro-boreal disjunctions: a remarkable biogeographical pattern illustrated by Nan Ao Island,<br />

Guangdong, China<br />

James Lazell..................................................................................................................................1261-1265<br />

Relative effects of climate change, isolation and competition on body-size evolution in the<br />

Japanese field mouse, Apo<strong>de</strong>mus argenteus<br />

Virginie Millien................................................................................................................................1267-1276<br />

Phylogeny of Cerberus (Serpentes: Homalopsinae) and phylogeography of Cerberus rynchops:<br />

diversification of a coastal marine snake in Southeast Asia<br />

Michael E. Alfaro; Daryl R. Karns; Harold K. Voris; Emily Abernathy; Stacey L. Sellins...............1277-1292<br />

Rain forest invasion of eucalypt-dominated woodland savanna, Iron Range, north-eastern<br />

Australia: I. Successional processes<br />

Jeremy Russell-Smith; Peter J. Stanton; Peter J. Whitehead; Andrew Edwards..........................1293-1303<br />

Rain forest invasion of eucalypt-dominated woodland savanna, Iron Range, north-eastern<br />

Australia: II. Rates of landscape change<br />

Jeremy Russell-Smith; Peter J. Stanton; Andrew C. Edwards; Peter J. Whitehead.....................1305-1316<br />

Contemporary landscape burning patterns in the far North Kimberley region of north-west<br />

Australia: human influences and environmental <strong>de</strong>terminants<br />

T. Vigilante; D. M. J. S. Bowman; R. Fisher; J. Russell-Smith; C. Yates......................................1317-1333<br />

A multi-scale biogeographical analysis of Bambusa arnhemica, a bamboo from monsoonal<br />

northern Australia<br />

Donald C. Franklin; David M. J. S. Bowman..................................................................................1335-1353<br />

Determinants of regional and local patterns in the floras of brai<strong>de</strong>d riverbeds in New Zealand<br />

Peter A. Williams; Susan Wiser.....................................................................................................1355-1372<br />

Isotopic (13C and 14C) evi<strong>de</strong>nce supporting the transformative effect of cattle on north Australian<br />

vegetation<br />

D. M. J. S. Bowman; B. R. Sharp; U. Zoppi...................................................................................1373-1375<br />

Seeing the jungle for the trees<br />

Robert P. Freckleton......................................................................................................................1377-1377<br />

Blackwell Publishing<br />

Towards a more sustainable use of the planet<br />

Susanne Stoll-Kleemann...............................................................................................................1377-1378<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 3, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

LIFE IN THE HYPOXIC AND ANOXIC ZONES: METABOLISM AND PROXIMATE<br />

COMPOSITION OF CARIBBEAN TROGLOBITIC CRUSTACEANS WITH OBSERVATIONS ON<br />

THE WATER CHEMISTRY OF TWO ANCHIALINE CAVES. R. E. Bishop, B. Kakuk, and J. J.<br />

Torres.............................................................................................................................................. 379–392.<br />

CYST <strong>DE</strong>POSITION BEHAVIOUR AND THE FUNCTIONAL MORPHOLOGY OF THE BROOD<br />

POUCH IN STREPTOCEPHALUS TORVICORNIS (BRANCHIOPODA: ANOSTRACA). Holger<br />

Kraus, Erich E<strong>de</strong>r, Ole Sten Møller, and Bernd Werding ............................................................... 393–397.<br />

BRANCHIPODOPSIS BUETTIKERI, NEW SPECIES (ANOSTRACA, BRANCHIPODIDAE), THE<br />

FIRST ARABIAN (SULTANATE OF OMAN) REPRESENTATIVE OF THE GENUS OF<br />

FRESHWATER FAIRY SHRIMPS, WITH BIOGEOGRAPHICAL REMARKS. Alain Thiéry and<br />

Séverine Jean................................................................................................................................. 398–408.<br />

LARVAL <strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT AND COMPLEMENTAL MALES IN CHELONIBIA TESTUDINARIA, A<br />

BARNACLE COMMENSAL WITH SEA TURTLES. John D. Zardus and Michael G. Hadfield...... 409–421.<br />

FEMALE AND MALE HAPLOSTOMA BREVICAUDA (COPEPODA: CYCLOPOIDA:<br />

ASCIDICOLIDAE), LIVING IN COMPOUND ASCIDIANS. Shigeko Ooishi................................... 422–439.<br />

ITUNELLA MUELLERI (HARPACTICOIDA: CANTHOCAMPTIDAE): A MARINE SPECIES WITH<br />

PREFERENCES FOR THE UPPER PART OF THE LITTORAL FRINGE. <strong>Mar</strong>ía B. Steinarsdóttir<br />

and Agnar Ingólfsson...................................................................................................................... 440–446.<br />

REVIEW AND RE<strong>DE</strong>SCRIPTION OF THE FRESHWATER ATYID SHRIMP GENUS SYNCARIS<br />

HOLMES, 1900, IN CALIFORNIA. Joel W. <strong>Mar</strong>tin and <strong>Mar</strong>y K. Wicksten..................................... 447–462.<br />

STATUS OF EUALUS PUSIOLUS IN THE NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC, WITH A <strong>DE</strong>SCRIPTION<br />

OF A NEW SPECIES OF EUALUS (<strong>DE</strong>CAPODA: HIPPOLYTIDAE). Gregory C. Jensen............ 463–469.<br />

32


FERTILIZATION SUCCESS WITHOUT ANTERIOR PLEOPODS IN LYSMATA WUR<strong>DE</strong>MANNI<br />

(<strong>DE</strong>CAPODA: CARI<strong>DE</strong>A), A PROTANDRIC SIMULTANEOUS HERMAPHRODITE. Dong Zhang<br />

and Junda Lin ................................................................................................................................. 470–473.<br />

CONFIRMATION OF EXTERNAL FERTILIZATION IN THE AMERICAN LOBSTER, HOMARUS<br />

AMERICANUS. D. E. Aiken, S. L. Waddy, and S. M. Mercer........................................................ 474–480.<br />

AN INVESTIGATION OF THE SOURCES OF VARIABILITY IN AMERICAN LOBSTER<br />

(HOMARUS AMERICANUS) EGGS AND LARVAE: FEMALE SIZE AND REPRODUCTIVE<br />

STATUS, AND INTERANNUAL AND INTERPOPULATION COMPARISONS. Patrick Ouellet and<br />

François Plante............................................................................................................................... 481–495.<br />

REPRODUCTION OF THE ALIEN CRAYFISH SPECIES PACIFASTACUS LENIUSCULUS IN<br />

LAKE SHIKARIBETSU, HOKKAIDO, JAPAN. Kazuyoshi Nakata, Akira Tanaka, and Seiji Goshima 496–501.<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MEGALOPAL PREMOULT STAGES OF THE GREEN CRAB,<br />

CARCINUS MAENAS (<strong>DE</strong>CAPODA, PORTUNIDAE), FROM LABORATORY CULTURE. J. I.<br />

González-Gordillo, A. Rodríguez, and H. Queiroga ....................................................................... 502–510.<br />

INVOLVEMENT OF METHYL FARNESOATE IN THE REGULATION OF MOLTING AND<br />

REPRODUCTION IN THE FRESHWATER CRAB OZIOTELPHUSA SENEX SENEX. P.<br />

Ramachandra Reddy, G. Purna Chandra Nagaraju, and P. Sreenivasula Reddy......................... 511–515.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for limiting similarity in a sand dune community................................................................557-567<br />

WENDY J. STUBBS, J. BASTOW WILSON<br />

Plant regeneration directs changes in grassland composition after extreme drought: a 13-year<br />

study in southern Switzerland............................................................................................................568-576<br />

A. STAMPFLI, M. ZEITER<br />

Diversity and dominance in palm (Arecaceae) communities in terra firme forests in the western<br />

Amazon basin....................................................................................................................................577-588<br />

JAANA VORMISTO, JENS-CHRISTIAN SVENNING, PAMELA HALL, HENRIK BALSLEV<br />

Community level engineering effects of Triglochin maritima (seasi<strong>de</strong> arrowgrass) in a salt marsh in<br />

northern New England, USA..............................................................................................................589-597<br />

BENJAMIN N. FOGEL, CAITLIN M. CRAIN, MARK D. BERTNESS<br />

Disturbance and regeneration dynamics of an old-growth North Patagonian rain forest in Chiloé<br />

Island, Chile.......................................................................................................................................598-608<br />

ALVARO G. GUTIÉRREZ, JUAN J. ARMESTO, JUAN CARLOS ARAVENA<br />

Soil-related habitat specialization in dipterocarp rain forest tree species in Borneo.........................609-623<br />

PETER A. PALMIOTTO, STUART J. DAVIES, KRISTIINA A. VOGT, MARK S. ASHTON, DANIEL<br />

J. VOGT, PETER S. ASHTON<br />

Effects of tephra <strong>de</strong>position on mire vegetation: a field experiment in Hokkaido, Japan..................624-634<br />

S. HOTES, P. POSCHLOD, H. TAKAHASHI, A. P. GROOTJANS, E. A<strong>DE</strong>MA<br />

Plant and soil responses to neighbour removal and fertilization in Alaskan tussock tundra.............635-647<br />

M. SYNDONIA BRET-HARTE, ERICA A. GARCÍA, VINCIANE M. SACRÉ, JOSHUA R.<br />

WHORLEY, JOANNA L. WAGNER, SUZANNE C. LIPPERT, F. STUART CHAPIN<br />

Initiation and maintenance of vegetation mosaics in an Arctic salt marsh........................................648-660<br />

J. R. MCLAREN, R. L. JEFFERIES<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling effects of litter quality and environment on peat accumulation over different time-scales661-674<br />

ILKA E. BAUER<br />

Demography of American chestnut populations: effects of a pathogen and a hyperparasite...........675-685<br />

ANITA L. DAVELOS, ANDREW M. JAROSZ<br />

Demographic analysis of dormancy and survival in the terrestrial orchid Cypripedium reginae.......686-695<br />

MARC KÉRY, KATHARINE B. GREGG<br />

Local adaptation of the clonal plant Ranunculus reptans to flooding along a small-scale gradient..696-706<br />

JOHN P. M. LENSSEN, MARK VAN KLEUNEN, MARKUS FISCHER, HANS <strong>DE</strong> KROON<br />

Diversity of gall-inducing insects in a Mexican tropical dry forest: the importance of plant species<br />

richness, life-forms, host plant age and plant <strong>de</strong>nsity........................................................................707-716<br />

PABLO CUEVAS-REYES, MAURICIO QUESADA, PAUL HANSON, RODOLFO DIRZO, KEN<br />

OYAMA<br />

Why do pollination generalist and specialist plant species show similar reproductive susceptibility<br />

to habitat fragmentation? ..................................................................................................................717-719<br />

33


LORENA ASHWORTH, RAMIRO AGUILAR, LEONARDO GALETTO, MARCELO ADRIÁN AIZEN<br />

Geranium purpureum Vill. .................................................................................................................720-731<br />

RICHARD J. TOFTS<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 40, No. 4, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

A MESSAGE FROM THE EDITOR...................................................................................................621-621<br />

DOMOIC ACID PRODUCTION By PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SERIATA (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) IN<br />

SCOTTISH WATERS<br />

Johanna Fehling; David H. Green; Keith Davidson; Christopher J. Bolch; Stephen S. Bates..........622-630<br />

EFFECTS OF ISLAND GROUPS, <strong>DE</strong>PTH, AND EXPOSURE TO OCEAN WAVES ON SUBTIDAL<br />

MACROALGAL ASSEMBLAGES IN THE RECHERCHE ARCHIPELAGO, WESTERN<br />

AUSTRALIA<br />

Nisse A. Goldberg; Gary A. Kendrick ................................................................................................631-641<br />

INORGANIC NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS UPTAKE KINETICS IN PALMARIA PALMATA<br />

(RHODOPHYTA)<br />

Brezo <strong>Mar</strong>tínez; Jose M. Rico............................................................................................................642-650<br />

EFFECTS OF LOWERING TEMPERATURE DURING CULTURE ON THE PRODUCTION OF<br />

POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS IN THE MARINE DIATOM PHAEODACTYLUM<br />

TRICORNUTUM (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)<br />

Hanming Jiang; Kunshan Gao...........................................................................................................651-654<br />

INFLUENCE OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION ON THE EXPRESSION OF PROLIFERATING<br />

CELL NUCLEAR ANTIGEN AND DNA POLYMERASE IN SKELETONEMA COSTATUM<br />

(BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)<br />

Su Fen Wei; Sheng-Ping L. Hwang; Jeng Chang ............................................................................ 655-663<br />

THE SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES OF PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA AND CRYPTOPERIDINIOPSOIDS<br />

(DINOPHYCEAE)<br />

Matthew W. Parrow; JoAnn M. Burkhol<strong>de</strong>r....................................................................................... 664-673<br />

GROWTH AND DOMOIC ACID PRODUCTION BY PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SERIATA<br />

(BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) UN<strong>DE</strong>R PHOSPHATE AND SILICATE LIMITATION<br />

Johanna Fehling; Keith Davidson; Christopher J. Bolch; Stephen S. Bates.................................... 674-683<br />

AUXOSPORE FORMATION AND THE MORPHOLOGY OF THE INITIAL CELL OF THE MARINE<br />

ARAPHID DIATOM GEPHYRIA MEDIA (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)<br />

Shinya Sato; Tamotsu Nagumo; Jiro Tanaka................................................................................... 684-691<br />

CHARACTERIZING AND QUANTIFYING PHOTOINHIBITION IN INTERTIDAL<br />

MICROPHYTOBENTHOS<br />

Gérard F. Blanchard; Jean-<strong>Mar</strong>c Guarini; Christian Dang; Pierre Richard ...................................... 692-696<br />

CONTRASTING EFFECTS OF METHIONINE SULFOXIMINE ON UPTAKE AND ASSIMILATION<br />

OF AMMONIUM IN ULVA INTESTINALIS (CHLOROPHYCEAE)<br />

Neill G. Barr; Rob J. Tijsen; T. Alwyn V. Rees ................................................................................. 697-704<br />

UV-EXCITED BLUE AUTOFLUORESCENCE OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA MULTISERIES<br />

(BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)<br />

Mónica V. Orellana; Timothy W. Petersen; Ger van <strong>de</strong>n Engh ....................................................... 705-710<br />

ANALYSIS OF MUCILAGE SECRETION AND EXCRETION IN MICRASTERIAS<br />

(CHLOROPHYTA) BY MEANS OF IMMUNOELECTRON MICROSCOPY AND DIGITAL TIME<br />

LAPSE VI<strong>DE</strong>O MICROSCOPY<br />

Anke Oertel; Nicole Aichinger; Romana Hochreiter; Josef Thalhamer; Ursula Lütz-Meindl............ 711-720<br />

MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF THE ASSIMILATORY NITRATE REDUCTASE GENE<br />

AND ITS EXPRESSION IN THE MARINE GREEN ALGA DUNALIELLA TERTIOLECTA<br />

(CHLOROPHYCEAE)<br />

Bongkeun Song; Bess B. Ward........................................................................................................ 721-731<br />

PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND COLD ACCLIMATION: MOLECULAR EVI<strong>DE</strong>NCE FROM A POLAR<br />

DIATOM<br />

Thomas Mock; Klaus Valentin.......................................................................................................... 732-741<br />

MOLECULAR I<strong>DE</strong>NTIFICATION OF TWO SIBLING SPECIES UN<strong>DE</strong>R THE NAME GRACILARIA<br />

CHILENSIS (RHODOPHYTA, GRACILARIALES)<br />

Séverine Cohen; Sylvain Faugeron; Enrique A. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez; Juan A. Correa; Frédérique Viard;<br />

Christophe Destombe; Myriam Valero.............................................................................................. 742-747<br />

34


PHYLOGEOGRAPHY OF GRACILARIA TIKVAHIAE (GRACILARIACEAE, RHODOPHYTA): A<br />

STUDY OF GENETIC DISCONTINUITY IN A CONTINUOUSLY DISTRIBUTED SPECIES BASED<br />

ON MOLECULAR EVI<strong>DE</strong>NCE<br />

Carlos Fre<strong>de</strong>rico Deluqui Gurgel; Suzanne Fre<strong>de</strong>ricq; James N. Norris ......................................... 748-758<br />

PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF THE GENUS EUGLENA (EUGLENOPHYCEAE) WITH<br />

PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THE TYPE SPECIES EUGLENA VIRIDIS<br />

Woongghi Shin; Richard E. Triemer ................................................................................................ 759-771<br />

PHYLOGENY OF AULACOSEIRA (BACILLARIOPHYTA) BASED ON MOLECULES AND<br />

MORPHOLOGY<br />

Stacy M. Edgar; Edward C. Theriot.................................................................................................. 772-788<br />

GENE SEQUENCE DIVERSITY AND THE PHYLOGENETIC POSITION OF ALGAE ASSIGNED<br />

TO THE GENERA PHAEOPHILA AND OCHLOCHAETE (ULVOPHYCEAE, CHLOROPHYTA)<br />

Charles J. O'Kelly; Brian Wysor; Wendy K. Bellows ........................................................................ 789-799<br />

PLANT CELL BIOLOGY ON CD ...................................................................................................... 800-802<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Structure of the Circulation Induced by a Shoaling Topographic Wave*. Genta Mizuta and Nelson<br />

G. Hogg....................................................................................................................................... 1793–1810.<br />

Global Ocean Circulation Mo<strong>de</strong>s Derived from a Multiple Box Mo<strong>de</strong>l. Ron Kahana, Grant R. Bigg,<br />

and <strong>Mar</strong>tin R. Wadley................................................................................................................. 1811–1823.<br />

Internal Ti<strong>de</strong>s Generated on a Corrugated Continental Slope. Part II: Along-Slope Barotropic<br />

Forcing*. Sonya Legg ................................................................................................................. 1824–1838.<br />

Driving Mechanism of Band Structure of Mean Current over the Continental Shelf. Atsuhiko<br />

sobe .............................................................................................................................................1839–1855.<br />

Reducing Errors in Temperature and Salinity in an Ocean Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forced by Restoring Boundary<br />

Conditions*. Igor V. Kamenkovich and E. S. Sarachik............................................................... 1856–1869.<br />

Absolute Transports of Mass and Temperature for the North Atlantic Current– Subpolar Front<br />

System. Paula Pérez-Brunius, Tom Rossby, and D. Randolph Watts....................................... 1870–1883.<br />

Oceanic Turbulence and Stochastic Mo<strong>de</strong>ls from Subsurface Lagrangian Data for the Northwest<br />

Atlantic Ocean. Milena Veneziani, Annalisa Griffa, Andy M. Reynolds, and Arthur J. <strong>Mar</strong>iano. 1884–1906.<br />

Latitudinal and Frequency Characteristics of the Westward Propagation of Large-Scale Oceanic<br />

Variability. Lee-Lueng Fu............................................................................................................ 1907–1921.<br />

The Global S1 Ti<strong>de</strong>. Richard D. Ray and Gary D. Egbert.......................................................... 1922–1935.<br />

NOTES AND CORRESPON<strong>DE</strong>NCE<br />

Temperature Advection: Internal versus External Processes. Tong Lee, Ichiro Fukumori, and<br />

Benyang Tang............................................................................................................................. 1936–1944.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 8, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Ramón <strong>Mar</strong>galef (1919–<strong>2004</strong>).......................................................................................................... 835-838<br />

Reproductive patterns of Calanus finmarchicus at the Norwegian midshelf in 1997<br />

Anna Pasternak; Kurt S. Tan<strong>de</strong>; Elena Arashkevich; Webjørn Melle............................................... 839-849<br />

Summer vertical distribution of paralarval gonatid squids in the northeast Pacific<br />

John R. Bower; Shogo Takagi.......................................................................................................... 851-857<br />

Larval stages of Stenocionops furcatus (Olivier, 1791) (Decapoda: Brachyura: Majoi<strong>de</strong>a) and a<br />

reappraisal of larval morphological characters for Mithracidae<br />

William Santana; Fernando <strong>Mar</strong>ques; Gerhard Pohle...................................................................... 859-874<br />

Toxicity of coastal coccolithophores (Prymnesiophyceae, Haptophyta)<br />

A. Houdan; A. Bonnard; J. Fresnel; S. Fouchard; C. Billard; I. Probert............................................ 875-883<br />

Light rather than iron controls photosynthate production and allocation in Southern Ocean<br />

phytoplankton populations during austral autumn<br />

T. van Oijen; M. A. van Leeuwe; E. Granum; F. J. Weissing; R. G. J. Bellerby; W. W. C. Gieskes;<br />

H. J. W. <strong>de</strong> Baar................................................................................................................................ 885-900<br />

Growth, <strong>de</strong>velopment and condition of Dendraster excentricus (Eschscholtz) larvae reared on<br />

natural and laboratory diets<br />

Adam M. Reitzel; Joel Webb; Shawn Arellano................................................................................. 901-908<br />

35


Life history, biomass and production of two planktonic cyclopoid copepods in a shallow subtropical<br />

reservoir<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ia da Graça Gama Melão; O<strong>de</strong>te Rocha.................................................................................... 909-923<br />

Cyanobacteria and cyanobacterial toxins in three alkaline Rift Valley lakes of Kenya—Lakes<br />

Bogoria, Nakuru and Elmenteita<br />

Andreas Ballot; Lothar Krienitz; Kiplagat Kotut; Claudia Wiegand; James S. Metcalf; Geoffrey A.<br />

Codd; Stephan Pflugmacher............................................................................................................. 925-935<br />

Calanus the cannibal<br />

Delphine Bonnet; Josefin Titelman; Roger Harris............................................................................. 937-948<br />

Midsummer <strong>de</strong>cline of a Daphnia population attributed in part to cyanobacterial capsule production<br />

Maggie Trabeau; Roberta Bruhn-Keup; Colleen McDermott; Melanie Keomany; Anne Millsaps;<br />

Anissa Emery; Bart De Stasio........................................................................................................... 949-961<br />

Occurrence of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) in the bloom-forming cyanobacterium<br />

Microcystis aeruginosa<br />

Zhengwen Liu; Donat P. Hä<strong>de</strong>r; Ruben Sommaruga....................................................................... 963-966<br />

Deleterious effect of Chattonella marina on short-necked clam (Ruditapes philippinarum); possible<br />

involvement of reactive oxygen species<br />

Daekyung Kim; Osamu Kumamoto; Kyoung-Seon Lee; Aiko Kuroda; Akihiko Fujii; Atsushi<br />

Ishimatus; Tatsuya Oda.................................................................................................................... 967-971<br />

Profiles of bacterial community composition and metabolic potential through a plug-flow bioreactor<br />

fed with lake water<br />

Lasse Riemann; Morten Søn<strong>de</strong>rgaard.............................................................................................. 973-978<br />

Reply to Horizons Article ‘Some i<strong>de</strong>as about the role of lipids in the life cycle of Calanus<br />

finmarchicus’ Irigoien (<strong>2004</strong>): I<br />

R. W. Campbell................................................................................................................................. 979-980<br />

Reply to Horizons Article ‘Some i<strong>de</strong>as about the role of lipids in the life cycle of Calanus<br />

finmarchicus’ Irigoien (<strong>2004</strong>): II<br />

Øyvind Fiksen; Øystein Varpe; Stein Kaartvedt................................................................................ 980-981<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 52, No. 2, August <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Manganese oxi<strong>de</strong> reactivity in North Sea .............................................................................................73-85<br />

Claar van <strong>de</strong>r Zee and Wim van Raaphorst<br />

Pelagic and seabed fluxes of particulate matter and carbon, and C:N ratios resolved by sediment<br />

traps during a spring bloom, southwest ................................................................................................87-98<br />

Lars Chresten Lund-Hansen, Morten Pejrup and Søren Flo<strong>de</strong>rus<br />

Comparison of the numerical grazing response of two marine heterotrophic nanoflagellates fed<br />

with different bacteria .........................................................................................................................99-107<br />

B. R. Mohapatra and K. Fukami<br />

Macrofaunal assemblages of benthic habitat of different complexity and the proposition of a mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />

of biogenic reef habitat regeneration in Foveaux Strait, New Zealand • .........................................109-125<br />

H. J. Cranfield, A. A. Row<strong>de</strong>n, D. J. Smith, D. P. Gordon and K. P. Michael<br />

A comparison of fish communities of subtidal seagrass beds and sandy seabeds in 13 marine<br />

embayments of a Caribbean island, based on species, families, size distribution and functional<br />

groups ..............................................................................................................................................127-147<br />

I. Nagelkerken and G. van <strong>de</strong>r Vel<strong>de</strong><br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 274, June 24, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />

Quinnell S, Hulsman K, Davie PJF<br />

Protein mo<strong>de</strong>l for pollutant uptake and elimination by living organisms and its implications for<br />

ecotoxicology..........................................................................................................................................:1-16<br />

Morán XAG, Fernán<strong>de</strong>z E, Pérez V<br />

Size-fractionated primary production, bacterial production and net community production in<br />

subtropical and tropical domains of the oligotrophic NE Atlantic in autumn.........................................:17-29<br />

Carrère V, Spilmont N, Davoult D<br />

36


Comparison of simple techniques for estimating chlorophyll a concentration in the intertidal zone<br />

using high spectral-resolution field-spectrometer data.........................................................................:31-40<br />

Widdows J, Blauw A, Heip CHR, Herman PMJ, Lucas CH, Mid<strong>de</strong>lburg JJ, Schmidt S, Brinsley MD,<br />

Twisk F, Verbeek H<br />

Role of physical and biological processes in sediment dynamics of a tidal flat in Westerschel<strong>de</strong><br />

Estuary, SW Netherlands......................................................................................................................:41-56<br />

Gui<strong>de</strong>tti P, Bianchi CN, Chiantore M, Schiaparelli S, Morri C, Cattaneo-Vietti R<br />

Living on the rocks: substrate mineralogy and the structure of subtidal rocky substrate<br />

communities in the Mediterranean Sea................................................................................................:57-68<br />

Nielsen TG, Bjørnsen PK, Boonruang P, Fryd M, Hansen PJ, Janekarn V, Limtrakulvong V, Munk<br />

P, Hansen OS, Satapoomin S, Sawangarreruks S, Thomsen HA, Østergaard JB<br />

Hydrography, bacteria and protist communities across the continental shelf and shelf slope of the<br />

Andaman Sea (NE Indian Ocean)........................................................................................................:69-86<br />

Munk P, Bjørnsen PK, Boonruang P, Fryd M, Hansen PJ, Janekarn V, Limtrakulvong V, Nielsen<br />

TG, Hansen OS, Satapoomin S, Sawangarreruks S, Thomsen HA, Østergaard JB<br />

Assemblages of fish larvae and mesozooplankton across the continental shelf and shelf slope of<br />

the Andaman Sea (NE Indian Ocean)..................................................................................................:87-97<br />

Satapoomin S, Nielsen TG, Hansen PJ<br />

Andaman Sea copepods: spatio-temporal variations in biomass and production, and role in the<br />

pelagic food web.................................................................................................................................:99-122<br />

Tozzi S, Schofield O, Falkowski P<br />

Historical climate change and ocean turbulence as selective agents for two key phytoplankton<br />

functional groups...............................................................................................................................:123-132<br />

Har<strong>de</strong>r T, Dobretsov S, Qian PY<br />

Waterborne polar macromolecules act as algal antifoulants in the seaweed Ulva reticulata...........:133-141<br />

Nagelkerken I, van <strong>de</strong>r Vel<strong>de</strong> G<br />

Are Caribbean mangroves important feeding grounds for juvenile reef fish from adjacent seagrass<br />

beds? ................................................................................................................................................:143-151<br />

Nagelkerken I, van <strong>de</strong>r Vel<strong>de</strong> G<br />

Relative importance of interlinked mangroves and seagrass beds as feeding habitats for juvenile<br />

reef fish on a Caribbean island.........................................................................................................:153-159<br />

Kurihara H, Shirayama Y<br />

Effects of increased atmospheric CO2 on sea urchin early <strong>de</strong>velopment........................................:161-169<br />

Greenfield DI, Lonsdale DJ, Cerrato RM, Lopez GR<br />

Effects of background concentrations of Aureococcus anophagefferens (brown ti<strong>de</strong>) on growth and<br />

feeding in the bivalve Mercenaria mercenaria..................................................................................:171-181<br />

Kamenos NA, Moore PG, Hall-Spencer JM<br />

Nursery-area function of maerl grounds for juvenile queen scallops Aequipecten opercularis and<br />

other invertebrates............................................................................................................................:183-189<br />

Antajan E, Gasparini S<br />

Assessment of Cryptophyceae ingestion by copepods using alloxanthin pigment: a caution .........:191-198<br />

Klein Breteler WCM, Koski M, Rampen S<br />

Role of essential lipids in copepod nutrition: no evi<strong>de</strong>nce for trophic upgrading of food quality by a<br />

marine ciliate.....................................................................................................................................:199-208<br />

Eriksson Wiklund AK, Sun<strong>de</strong>lin B<br />

Biomarker sensitivity to temperature and hypoxia — a seven year field study................................:209-214<br />

Styrishave B, Rewitz K, Lund T, An<strong>de</strong>rsen O<br />

Variations in ecdysteroid levels and Cytochrome p450 expression during moult and reproduction in<br />

male shore crabs Carcinus maenas.................................................................................................:215-224<br />

Riveiro I, Guisan<strong>de</strong> C, Maneiro I, Vergara AR<br />

Parental effects in the European sardine Sardina pilchardus...........................................................:225-234<br />

Abraham CL, Sy<strong>de</strong>man WJ<br />

Ocean climate, euphausiids and auklet nesting: inter-annual trends and variation in phenology,<br />

diet and growth of a planktivorous seabird, Ptychoramphus aleuticus.............................................:235-250<br />

Garrigue C, Do<strong>de</strong>mont R, Steel D, Baker CS<br />

Organismal and 'gametic' capture-recapture using microsatellite genotyping confirm low<br />

abundance and reproductive autonomy of humpback whales on the wintering grounds of New<br />

Caledonia..........................................................................................................................................:251-262<br />

NOTE<br />

37


Sorte CJB, Hofmann GE<br />

Changes in latitu<strong>de</strong>s, changes in aptitu<strong>de</strong>s: Nucella canaliculata (Mollusca: Gastropoda) is more<br />

stressed at its range edge.................................................................................................................:263-268<br />

THEME SECTION<br />

Perspectives on ecosystem-based approaches to the management of marine resources<br />

I<strong>de</strong>a and coordination: Browman HI, Stergiou KI.........................:269-303 Full Theme Section in pdf format<br />

Browman HI, Stergiou KI<br />

Introduction.......................................................................................................................................:269-270<br />

Browman HI, Stergiou KI<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ine Protected Areas as a central element of ecosystem-based management: <strong>de</strong>fining their<br />

location, size and number.................................................................................................................:271-272<br />

Cury PM<br />

Tuning the ecoscope for the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries......................................................:272-275<br />

Hilborn R<br />

Ecosystem-based fisheries management: the carrot or the stick?...................................................:275-278<br />

Jennings S<br />

The ecosystem approach to fishery management: a significant step towards sustainable use of the<br />

marine environment?........................................................................................................................:279-282<br />

Lotze HK<br />

Repetitive history of resource <strong>de</strong>pletion and mismanagement: the need for a shift in perspective .:282-285<br />

Mace PM<br />

In <strong>de</strong>fence of fisheries scientists, single-species mo<strong>de</strong>ls and other scapegoats: confronting the real<br />

problems...........................................................................................................................................:285-291<br />

Sissenwine M, Murawski S<br />

Moving beyond 'intelligent tinkering': Advancing an Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries..................:291-295<br />

Zeller D, Pauly D<br />

The future of fisheries: from 'exclusive' resource policy to 'inclusive' public policy..........................:295-298<br />

Erratum<br />

Campbell & Dower, Vol. 263:93-99, 2003 ...............................................................................................:304<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 275, July 14, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Widdicombe S, Austen MC, Kendall MA, Olsgard F, Schaanning MT, Dashfield SL, Needham HR<br />

Importance of bioturbators for biodiversity maintenance: indirect effects of fishing disturbance...........:1-10<br />

Kicklighter CE, Fisher CR, Hay ME<br />

Chemical <strong>de</strong>fense of hydrothermal vent and hydrocarbon seep organisms: a preliminary<br />

assessment using shallow-water consumers.......................................................................................:11-19<br />

Barnes DKA, Kuklinski P<br />

Scale-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt variation in competitive ability among encrusting Arctic species..............................:21-32<br />

For<strong>de</strong> SE, Doak DF<br />

Multitrophic interactions mediate recruitment variability in a rocky intertidal community.....................:33-45<br />

Darnau<strong>de</strong> AM, Salen-Picard C, Harmelin-Vivien ML<br />

Depth variation in terrestrial particulate organic matter exploitation by marine coastal benthic<br />

communities off the Rhone River <strong>de</strong>lta (NW Mediterranean)...............................................................:47-57<br />

Janssen F, Neumann T, Schmidt M<br />

Inter-annual variability in cyanobacteria blooms in the Baltic Sea controlled by wintertime<br />

hydrographic conditions........................................................................................................................:59-68<br />

Schlüter L, Gar<strong>de</strong> K, Kaas H<br />

Detection of the toxic cyanobacteria Nodularia spumigena by means of a 4-keto-myxoxanthophylllike<br />

pigment in the Baltic Sea................................................................................................................:69-78<br />

Hansen PJ, Miranda L, Azanza R<br />

Green Noctiluca scintillans: a dinoflagellate with its own greenhouse.................................................:79-87<br />

Barneah O, Weis VM, Perez S, Benayahu Y<br />

Diversity of dinoflagellate symbionts in Red Sea soft corals: mo<strong>de</strong> of symbiont acquisition matters..:89-95<br />

Rodriguez-Lanetty M, Krupp DA, Weis VM<br />

Distinct ITS types of Symbiodinium in Cla<strong>de</strong> C correlate with cnidarian/dinoflagellate specificity<br />

during onset of symbiosis...................................................................................................................:97-102<br />

Miao AJ, Wang WX<br />

38


Relationships between cell-specific growth rate, and uptake rate of cadmium and zinc by a coastal<br />

diatom ...............................................................................................................................................:103-113<br />

Stæhr PA, <strong>Mar</strong>kager S, Sand-Jensen K<br />

Pigment specific in vivo light absorption of phytoplankton from estuarine, coastal and oceanic<br />

waters................................................................................................................................................:115-128<br />

Regoli F, Cerrano C, Chierici E, Chiantore MC, Bavestrello G<br />

Seasonal variability of prooxidant pressure and antioxidant adaptation to symbiosis in the<br />

Mediterranean <strong>de</strong>mosponge Petrosia ficiformis...............................................................................:129-137<br />

Villinski JC, Hayes JM, Villinski JT, Brassell SC, Raff RA<br />

Carbon-isotopic shifts associated with heterotrophy and biosynthetic pathways in direct- and<br />

indirect-<strong>de</strong>veloping sea urchins........................................................................................................:139-151<br />

Ferrell DL<br />

Gastropod shell size and morphology influence conspecific interactions in an encrusting hydroid.:153-162<br />

Beninger PG, Decottignies P, Rincé Y<br />

Localization of qualitative particle selection sites in the heterorhabdic filibranch Pecten maximus<br />

(Bivalvia: Pectinidae) ........................................................................................................................:163-173<br />

Swanson CA<br />

Effect of substrate availability and conspecific cues on communal oviposition in the apple murex<br />

snail Phyllonotus pomum..................................................................................................................:175-184<br />

Svensson CJ, Jenkins SR, Hawkins SJ, Myers AA, Range P, Paula J, O'Riordan RM, Åberg P<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ls of open populations with space-limited recruitment in stochastic environments: relative<br />

importance of recruitment and survival in populations of Semibalanus balanoi<strong>de</strong>s.........................:185-197<br />

Berntsson KM, Jonsson PR, Larsson AI, Holdt S<br />

Rejection of unsuitable substrata as a potential driver of aggregated settlement in the barnacle<br />

Balanus improvisus...........................................................................................................................:199-210<br />

Mistri M<br />

Effects of hypoxia on predator-prey interactions between juvenile Carcinus aestuarii and<br />

Musculista senhousia........................................................................................................................:211-217<br />

Johnston D, Ritar A, Thomas C, Jeffs A<br />

Digestive enzyme profiles of spiny lobster Jasus edwardsii phyllosoma larvae...............................:219-230<br />

Williams K, Papanikos N, Phelps RP, Shardo JD<br />

Development, growth, and yolk utilization of hatchery-reared red snapper Lutjanus campechanus<br />

larvae ................................................................................................................................................:231-239<br />

Mori Y, Boyd IL<br />

Segregation of foraging between two sympatric penguin species: does rate maximisation make the<br />

difference?........................................................................................................................................:241-249<br />

Schiavini A, Rey AR<br />

Long days, long trips: foraging ecology of female rockhopper penguins Eudyptes chrysocome<br />

chrysocome at Tierra <strong>de</strong>l Fuego.......................................................................................................:251-262<br />

Staniland IJ, Reid K, Boyd IL<br />

Comparing individual and spatial influences on foraging behaviour in Antarctic fur seals<br />

Arctocephalus gazella.......................................................................................................................:263-274<br />

Forcada J, Gazo M, Aguilar A, Gonzalvo J, Fernán<strong>de</strong>z-Contreras M<br />

Bottlenose dolphin abundance in the NW Mediterranean: addressing heterogeneity in distribution:275-287<br />

Ren<strong>de</strong>ll L, Whitehead H, Escribano R<br />

Sperm whale habitat use and foraging success off northern Chile: Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of ecological links<br />

between coastal and pelagic systems..............................................................................................:289-295<br />

Weimerskirch H, Le Corre M, Jaquemet S, Potier M, <strong>Mar</strong>sac F<br />

Foraging strategy of a top predator in tropical waters: great frigatebirds in the Mozambique<br />

Channel.............................................................................................................................................:297-308<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 276, August 2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

OBITUARY<br />

In Memoriam Ramon <strong>Mar</strong>galef<br />

(by <strong>Mar</strong>ta Estrada).......................................................................................................................................:1<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />

Álvarez-Salgado XA, Gilcoto M<br />

39


Inferring nitrification rates with an inverse method in a coastal upwelling system, Ría <strong>de</strong> Vigo (NW<br />

Spain)......................................................................................................................................................:3-17<br />

Cabral HN, Murta AG<br />

Effect of sampling <strong>de</strong>sign on abundance estimates of benthic invertebrates in environmental<br />

monitoring studies.................................................................................................................................:19-24<br />

Shin PKS, Ellingsen KE<br />

Spatial patterns of soft-sediment benthic diversity in subtropical Hong Kong waters..........................:25-35<br />

Mortimer RJG, Harris SJ, Krom MD, Freitag TE, Prosser JI, Barnes J, Anschutz P, Hayes PJ,<br />

Davies IM<br />

Anoxic nitrification in marine sediments................................................................................................:37-52<br />

Stark JS, Riddle MJ, Smith SDA<br />

Influence of an Antarctic waste dump on recruitment to nearshore marine soft-sediment<br />

assemblages.........................................................................................................................................:53-70<br />

Van Elven BR, Lavery PS, Kendrick GA<br />

Reefs as contributors to diversity of epiphytic macroalgae assemblages in seagrass meadows........:71-83<br />

Tentori E, Allemand D, Shepherd R<br />

Cell growth and calcification result from uncoupled physiological processes in the soft coral<br />

Litophyton arboreum.............................................................................................................................:85-92<br />

Dumont C, Himmelman JH, Russell MP<br />

Size-specific movement of green sea urchins Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis on urchin barrens<br />

in eastern Canada...............................................................................................................................:93-101<br />

Mazouni N<br />

Influence of suspen<strong>de</strong>d oyster cultures on nitrogen regeneration in a coastal lagoon (Thau,<br />

France)..............................................................................................................................................:103-113<br />

Caro AU, Castilla JC<br />

Predator-inducible <strong>de</strong>fences and local intrapopulation variability of the intertidal mussel<br />

Semimytilus algosus in central Chile................................................................................................:115-123<br />

Pan JF, Wang WX<br />

Uptake of Hg(II) and methylmercury by the green mussel Perna viridis un<strong>de</strong>r different organic<br />

carbon conditions..............................................................................................................................:125-136<br />

Halpin PM, Menge BA, Hofmann GE<br />

Experimental <strong>de</strong>monstration of plasticity in the heat shock response of the intertidal mussel Mytilus<br />

californianus......................................................................................................................................:137-145<br />

Bachelet G, Simon-Bouhet B, Desclaux C, Garcia-Meunier P, Mairesse G, <strong>de</strong> Montaudouin X,<br />

Raigné H, Randriambao K, Sauriau PG, Viard F<br />

Invasion of the eastern Bay of Biscay by the nassariid gastropod Cyclope neritea: origin and<br />

effects on resi<strong>de</strong>nt fauna...................................................................................................................:147-159<br />

Kojima S, Hayashi I, Kim D, Iijima A, Furota T<br />

Phylogeography of an intertidal direct-<strong>de</strong>veloping gastropod Batillaria cumingi around the<br />

Japanese Islands..............................................................................................................................:161-172<br />

Kiyofuji H, Saitoh SI<br />

Use of nighttime visible images to <strong>de</strong>tect Japanese common squid Todaro<strong>de</strong>s pacificus fishing<br />

areas and potential migration routes in the Sea of Japan................................................................:173-186<br />

Invidia M, Sei S, Gorbi G<br />

Survival of the copepod Acartia tonsa following egg exposure to near anoxia and to sulfi<strong>de</strong> at<br />

different pH values............................................................................................................................:187-196<br />

Halpern BS<br />

Habitat bottlenecks in stage-structured species: hermit crabs as a mo<strong>de</strong>l system..........................:197-207<br />

Smith LD<br />

Biogeographic differences in claw size and performance in an introduced crab predator Carcinus<br />

maenas.............................................................................................................................................:209-222<br />

Rufino MM, Maynou F, Abelló P, Yule AB<br />

Small-scale non-linear geostatistical analysis of Liocarcinus <strong>de</strong>purator (Crustacea: Brachyura)<br />

abundance and size structure in a western Mediterranean population............................................:223-235<br />

Yoneda M, Wright PJ<br />

Temporal and spatial variation in reproductive investment of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua in the<br />

northern North Sea and Scottish west coast ....................................................................................:237-248<br />

Nemerson DM, Able KW<br />

40


Spatial patterns in diet and distribution of juveniles of four fish species in Delaware Bay marsh<br />

creeks: factors influencing fish abundance.......................................................................................:249-262<br />

Simpson SD, Meekan MG, McCauley RD, Jeffs A<br />

Attraction of settlement-stage coral reef fishes to reef noise............................................................:263-268<br />

Overholtzer-McLeod KL<br />

Variance in reef spatial structure masks <strong>de</strong>nsity <strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce in coral-reef fish populations on<br />

natural versus artificial reefs.............................................................................................................:269-280<br />

Jessop TS, Hamann M, Limpus CJ<br />

Body condition and physiological changes in male green turtles during breeding...........................:281-288<br />

NOTES<br />

Dinmore TA, Jennings S<br />

Predicting abundance-body mass relationships in benthic infaunal communities............................:289-292<br />

Miyamoto Y, Noda T<br />

Effects of mussels on competitively inferior species: competitive exclusion to facilitation...............:293-298<br />

Davenport J, Aine Healy A, Casey N, Heffron JJA<br />

Diet-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt UVAR and UVBR resistance in the high shore harpacticoid copepod Tigriopus<br />

brevicornis.........................................................................................................................................:299-303<br />

COMMENTS<br />

Bayne BL<br />

Comparisons of measurements of clearance rates in bivalve molluscs...........................................:305-306<br />

Riisgård HU<br />

Intercalibration of methods for measurement of bivalve filtration rates-a turning point....................:307-308<br />

REPLY COMMENT<br />

Petersen JK<br />

Methods for measurement of bivalve clearance rate-hope for common un<strong>de</strong>rstanding..................:309-310<br />

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

Vol. 182, Scientific Results, Sites 1126-1134, 8 October –7 December 1998.<br />

1. Leg 182 Synthesis: Exposed Secrets of the Great Australian Bight<br />

David A. Feary, Albert C. Hine, Noel P. James, and Mitchell J. Malone<br />

2. Oligocene Radiolarians, Diatoms, and Ebridians from the Great Australian Bight (ODP Leg 182,<br />

Site 1128)<br />

Annika Sanfilippo and Elisabeth Fourtanier<br />

3. Neogene Planktonic Foraminiferal Biostratigraphy of Sites 1126, 1128, 1130, 1132, and 1134,<br />

ODP Leg 182, Great Australian Bight<br />

Qianyu Li, Brian McGowran, and Charlotte A. Brunner<br />

4. Eocene–Oligocene Planktonic Foraminiferal Biostratigraphy of Sites 1126, 1130, 1132, and<br />

1134, ODP Leg 182, Great Australian Bight<br />

Qianyu Li, Brian McGowran, and Noel P. James<br />

5. Quaternary Planktonic Foraminiferal Biostratigraphy, ODP Leg 182 Sites<br />

Charlotte A. Brunner, Miriam Andres, Ann E. Holbourn, S. Siedlecki, Gregg R. Brooks, Roberto S.<br />

Molina Garza, Michael D. Fuller, Bryan C. Ladner, Albert C. Hine, and Qianyu Li<br />

6. Data Report: Calcareous Nannofossil Biostratigraphy of Site 1127, Ocean Drilling Program Leg<br />

182<br />

Bryan C. Ladner<br />

7. Data Report: Texture and Composition of Quaternary Upper-Slope Sediments in the Great<br />

Australian Bight: Sites 1130 and 1132<br />

Gregg R. Brooks, Albert C. Hine, David Mallinson, and Tina M. Drexler<br />

8. Data Report: Late Pleistocene–Holocene Sedimentation along the Upper Slope of the Great<br />

Australian Bight<br />

Albert C. Hine, Gregg R. Brooks, David Mallinson, Charlotte A. Brunner, Noel P. James, David A.<br />

Feary, Ann E. Holbourn, Tina M. Drexler, and Peter Howd<br />

9. Data Report: Sedimentology of a Pleistocene Middle Slope Cool-Water Carbonate Platform,<br />

Great Australian Bight, ODP Leg 182<br />

J.A. Simo and N.M. Slatter<br />

10. Data Report: Carbonate Mineralogy of Sites Drilled during Leg 182<br />

Peter K. Swart, Noel P. James, David Mallinson, Mitchell J. Malone, Hiroki Matsuda, and Toni<br />

Simo<br />

41


11. Data Report: Stable Isotopic Composition and Carbonate Mineralogy of Cool-Water Carbonate<br />

Sediments, Sites 1127, 1129, and 1131<br />

Mitchell J. Malone<br />

12. Data Report: Petrography and Stable Isotope Geochemistry of Lower Oligocene to Middle<br />

Miocene Carbonates, Site 1132, Great Australian Bight<br />

Hiroki Matsuda, Hi<strong>de</strong>aki Machiyama, and Noel P. James<br />

13. Carbon and Oxygen Isotopes of Cool-Water Bryozoans from the Great Australian Bight and<br />

Their Paleoenvironmental Significance<br />

Hi<strong>de</strong>aki Machiyama, Tsutomu Yamada, Naotomo Kaneko, Yasufumi Iryu, Kei Odawara, Ryuji<br />

Asami, Hiroki Matsuda, Shunsuke F. Mawatari, Yvonne Bone, and Noel P. James<br />

14. Data Report: Mineralogy and Geochemistry of ODP Site 1128, Great Australian Bight<br />

David J. Mallinson, Benjamin A. Flower, Albert C. Hine, Gregg R. Brooks, Roberto Molina Garza,<br />

Tina M. Drexler, and the Leg 182 Shipboard Scientific Party<br />

15. Data Report: Late Pleistocene Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Stratigraphy in Bulk- and Fine-<br />

Fraction Carbonate from the Great Australian Bight, ODP Leg 182, Site 1127<br />

Miriam S. Andres and Judith A. McKenzie<br />

16. Data Report: Trace Element Geochemistry of Cenozoic Cool-Water Carbonates, Sites 1126-<br />

1132, Great Australian Bight<br />

Laurent Emmanuel, Cécile Robin, and Maurice Renard<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA MARITIMA:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 1-2, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Shlunzen, K. H. ¡ Krell, U.: Atmospheric Parameters for the North Sea: a Review......................................1<br />

Lenhart, H.-J ¡ Pohlemann, T.: North Sea Hydrodynamic Mo<strong>de</strong>lling: a Review........................................53<br />

Topcu, D. H. ¡ Brockmann, U. Nutrients and Organic Compounds in the North Sea<br />

(Concentrations, Dynamics and Methods): a Review.................................................................................89<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 3, June <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Interactions of Cu (II) and Fe (III) with mangal humic substances studied by synchronous<br />

fluorescence spectroscopy and potentiometric titration.................................................................... 145-155<br />

H. Ghatak, S.K. Mukhopadhyay, T.K. Jana, B.K. Sen, S. Sen<br />

Standing crop and aboveground biomass partitioning of a dwarf mangrove forest in Taylor River<br />

Slough, Florida.................................................................................................................................. 157-164<br />

C. Coronado-Molina, J.W. Day, E. Reyes, B.C. Perez<br />

Changes in vernal pool edaphic settings through mitigation at the project and landscape scale.... 165-178<br />

Matt Wacker, Nina M. Kelly<br />

How to increase juvenile shrimps in mangrove waters?................................................................... 179-188<br />

N. Rajendran, K. Kathiresan<br />

Hydrological assessment for wetland conservation at Wicken Fen.................................................. 189-204<br />

M.P. McCartney, A. <strong>de</strong> la Hera<br />

Effects of periodic flooding and root pruning on Quercus nuttallii seedlings.................................... 205-214<br />

J.W. Farmer, S.R. Pezeshki<br />

Environmental gradients, plant distribution, and species richness in arctic salt marsh near Prudhoe<br />

Bay, Alaska....................................................................................................................................... 215-233<br />

Dale W. Funk, Lynn E. Noel, Adam H. Freedman<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Phylogeny of the African murid tribe Otomyini (Ro<strong>de</strong>ntia), based on morphological and allozyme<br />

evi<strong>de</strong>nce....................................................................................................................................................389<br />

Peter John Taylor, Christiane Denys, Madhupa Mukerjee<br />

Morphological and molecular taxonomic analysis of the Encarsia meritoria species-complex<br />

(Hymenoptera, Aphelinidae), parasitoids of whiteflies (Hemiptera, Aleyrodidae) of economic<br />

importance................................................................................................................................................403<br />

Andrew Polaszek, Shahab Manzari, Donald L. J. Quicke<br />

42


Genetic exchange between anchialine cave populations by means of larval dispersal: the case of<br />

a new gastropod species Neritilia cavernicola..........................................................................................423<br />

Yasunori Kano, Tomoki Kase<br />

Phylogeny of the Aplysiidae (Gastropoda, Opisthobranchia) with new aspects of the evolution of<br />

seahares...................................................................................................................................................439<br />

Annette Klussmann-Kolb<br />

The measurement of test severity, significance tests for resolution, and a unified philosophy of<br />

phylogenetic inference..............................................................................................................................463<br />

Kevin <strong>de</strong> Queiroz<br />

First International Phylogenetic Nomenclature Meeting: a report.............................................................475<br />

Michel Laurin, Philip D. Cantino<br />

43

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