Biology of copepods : proceedings of the Third International Conference on Copepoda

書誌事項

Biology of copepods : proceedings of the Third International Conference on Copepoda

edited by Geoffrey A. Boxshall and H. Kurt Schminke

(Developments in hydrobiology, 47)

Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1988

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注記

"Reprinted from Hydrobiologia, vols. 167/168 (1988)."

Conference held at the British Museum (Natural History) in London during August 1987

Includes bibliographies and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This volume contains the Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Copepoda, held at the British Museum (Natural History) in London during August 1987. The central theme of the conference was the biology of marine planktonic copepods, although the scientific programme was extremely varied reflecting the wide range of life styles adopted by copepods. The three invited symposia held during the conference focussed attention on particular topical areas of research within the field of marine plankton, and also provided reviews of chosen aspects of copepod biology. These symposia were highly successful. The papers they contained were both informative and stimulating and they bring to this volume a lasting significance. Each symposium was organised by its chairman; Bruce Frost (University of Washington) decided on the balance of topics, selected the speakers and introduced the session on 'The biology and taxonomy of Calanus', Roger Harris (Marine Biological Association) performed the same vital role for 'Experimental studies: rate processes in field populations of planktonic copepods', and Howard Roe (Institute of Oceanographic Sciences) for 'Oceanic and deep-sea copepods'. The impact of these papers will be much enhanced by the large number of high quality contributed and poster papers on marine plankton and by the invited review of 'Copepod luminescence' by Peter Herring (Institute of Oceano graphic Sciences). The fascinating review of 'Copepod eyes' by Mike Land FRS (University of Sussex) is not published here.

目次

The Maxilliped Lecture.- Copepods and copepodologists, or What's in a name?.- One: Rate Processes in Field Populations of Planktonic Copepods.- 1. Grazing rates and behaviors of Neocalanus plumchrus: implications for phytoplankton control in the subarctic Pacific.- 2. Day/night differences in the grazing impact of marine copepods.- 3. Copepod feeding behavior and the measurement of grazing rates in vivo and in vitro.- 4. Ecological significance of individual variability in copepod bioenergetics.- 5. Should we expect a relationship between primary production and fisheries? The role of copepod dynamics as a filter of trophic variability.- Two: The Taxonomy and Biology of Calanus.- 6. Review of the taxonomy of the Calanidae (Copepoda) and the limits to the genus Calanus.- 7. Feeding biology of Calanus: a new perspective.- 8. The lipid biochemistry of calanoid copepods.- 9. An evaluation of factors affecting vertical distribution among recruits of Calanus finmarchicus in three adjacent high-latitude localities.- 10. Comparative life histories in the genera Calanus and Neocalanus in high latitudes of the northern hemisphere.- Three: Oceanic and Deep-Sea Copepods.- 11. Response of harpacticoid copepods to habitat structure at a deep-sea site.- 12. Spatial heterogeneity and niche differentiation in oceanic zooplankton.- 13. Independent life cycles: an alternative to the asynchronism hypothesis for antarctic Calanoid copepods.- 14. Midwater biomass profiles over the Madeira Abyssal Plain and the contribution of copepods.- 15. Copepod luminescence.- Four: Marine Plankton.- 16. Rapid responses to stress in Eurytemora affinis.- 17. Influence of temperature and food concentration on body size, weight and lipid content of two Calanoid copepod species.- 18. Comparative carbon-specific ingestion rates of phytoplankton by Acartia tonsa. Centropages velificatus and Eucalanus pileatus grazing on natural phytoplankton assemblages in the plume of the Mississippi River (northern Gulf of Mexico continental shelf).- 19. Propagation of planktonic copepods: production and mortality of eggs.- 20. Seasonal occurrence and dominance of Centropages congeners in the Middle Atlantic Bight, USA.- 21. Seasonal size distribution of developmental stages of sub-antarctic copepod.- 22. Observations on egg production rates and seasonal changes in the internal morphology of Mediterranean populations of Acartia clausi and Centropages typicus.- 23. The copepod Centropages abdominalis as a carrier of the stalked ciliate Zoothamnium.- 24. Vertical distribution and seasonal numerical abundance of the Calanidae in oceanic waters to the south-west of the British Isles.- 25. Protein polymorphisms in six species of the genus Calanus.- 26. Body sizes, development rates, and genome sizes among Calanus species.- 27. Temperature-dependent development and growth of Calanus sinicus (Copcpoda: Calanoida) in the laboratory.- 28. Foraging tactics and prey-selection patterns of omnivorous and carnivorous calanoid copepods.- 29. Impedance traces of copepod appendage movements illustrating sensory feeding behaviour.- 30. Observations on the taxonomic composition and vertical distribution of cyclopoid copepods in the central Red Sea.- 31. Planktonic copepods of the Bras d'Or Lakes system. Nova Scotia, Canada.- 32. Summer-winter differences in copepod distribution around South Georgia.- 33. Vertical distribution of Pleuromamma (Copepoda: Metridinidae) across the eastern North Pacific Ocean.- 34. Preliminary observations on the copepods of Tudor Creek, Mombasa, Kenya.- 35. On Gaussia Wolfenden (Copepoda. Calanoida, Metridinidae).- 36. A new genus of Platycopioida (Copepoda) from a marine cave on Bermuda.- 37. The Saphirella problem.- Five: Freshwater Copepods.- 38. Geographical variation in dormancy in a copepod: evidence from population crosses.- 39. Changes of Copepoda populations in Lake Kinneret during 1969-1985.- 40. Contribution to the taxonomy and distribution of Cyclops abyssorum Sars (Crustacea, Copepoda) in several lakes and ponds of central Italy.- 41. Taxonomy of the genus Megacyclops (Crustacea, Copepoda): morphometry and the use of enzyme electrophoresis.- 42. Genetic differentiation of freshwater pond copepods at arctic sites.- 43. On some freshwater harpacticoids from Japan, closely related to Canthocamptus mirabilis St?rba.- 44. Locomotion in copepods: patterns of movements and energetics of Cyclops.- 45. On nine Tropodiaptomus-species (Copepoda, Calanoida) from equatorial East Africa.- 46. Yansacyclops ferrarii, new genus, new species (Copepoda: Cyclopoida) from the Amazon Basin, Brazil.- 47. Harpacticoid copepods from Una do Prelado River (Sao Paulo, Brazil): genus Schizopera.- 48. Allocyclops silvaticus sp. n. (Copepoda. Cyclopoida, Cyclopidae), the first representative of the genus in South Amcrica.- 49. The effect of fish predation on Cyclops life cycle.- Six: Harpacticoid Copepods.- 50. Competition between the sibling species Tisbe holothuriae and T. battagliai (Harpacticoida).- 51. Effect of inbreeding and salinity on quantitative characters and asymmetry of Tisbe holothuriae (Humes).- 52. Reproductive compatibility among latitudinally separated Scottolana canadensis (Willey) (Harpacticoida).- 53. Site-to-site variability in abundance of meiobenthic copepods along a tidal gradient over 24 hours.- 54. Gelyelloida, a new order of stygobiont copepods from European karstic systems.- 55. Evolutionary implications of swimming behaviour in meiobenthic copepods.- 56. Development of functional adaptation to clasping behaviour in harpacticoid copepods (Copepoda, Harpacticoida).- 57. Harpacticoid copepods associated with the seagrass Halophila ovalis in the Ashtamudi Estuary, south-west coast of India.- Seven: Parasitic and Associated Copepods.- 58. Parachordeumium amphiurae: a cuckoo copepod?.- 59. A new annelidicolous copepod, Cyclorhiza megalova n. sp., with comments on its functional biology and possible phylogenetic relationships.- 60. The integumental ultrastructure of Lamippe rubra Bruzelius and Enalcyonium rubicundum Olsson (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida).- 61. Copepods associated with reef corals: a comparison between the Atlantic and the Pacific.- 62. Copepoda from deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold seeps.- 63. Cladistics of Sunaristes, a genus of harpacticoid copepods associated with hermit crabs.- 64. Two morpho-types of Botryllophilus (Cyclopoida, Ascidicolidae).- 65. Anthessius spp. (Anthessiidae) associated with Tridacnidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia) removed to a new genus Tridachnophilus.- 66. Long-term changes in the population size and geographical distribution of Pennella sp. (Copepoda) on the saury, Cololabis saira, in the western North Pacific Ocean and adjacent seas.- 67. Experimental studies on the development of Lernaeocera branchialis(Copepoda: Pennellidae): population processes from egg production to maturation on the flatfish host.- 68. Host and site selection by larval stages and adults of the parasitic copepod Lernaeenicus sprattae (Sowerby) (Copepoda, Pennellidae) in the Oslofjord.- 69. The ultrastructure of the spermatozoon of Lernaeocera branchialis (Copepoda: Pennellidae).- 70. Ultrastructural studies on the early cuticular metamorphosis of adult female Lernaeocera branchialis (L.) (Copepoda, Pennellidae).- 71. Some evolutionary trends in caligid copepods.- 72. Zoogeography of parasitic Copepoda of the New Zealand region.- 73. Functional morphology of the mouth tube of a lernaeopodid Pseudocharopinus nurcinae (Pillai, 1962) (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida).

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BA06770478
  • ISBN
    • 9061936543
  • LCCN
    88006416
  • 出版国コード
    ne
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Dordrecht ; Boston
  • ページ数/冊数
    xii, 639 p.
  • 大きさ
    27 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
  • 親書誌ID
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