Search results for "BIVALVIA"
showing 10 items of 130 documents
A new lessepsian species in the western Mediterranean ( Brachidontes pharaonis Bivalvia: Mytilidae): density, resource allocation and biomass
2008
The present study reports on population dynamics and growth performance relative to a lesser known exotic invasive species ( Brachidontes pharaonis ) inhabiting the southern Mediterranean. The study was carried out in western Sicily, where B. pharaonis is present on both the submerged and emerged surfaces of a hyperhaline saltpan. Individuals were scraped, counted and measured for shell length, total weight, somatic, gonadic and shell biomass. Brachidontes pharaonis intensively colonized all hard substrates of the saltpan with annual average densities of 375 ± 293 ind. 400 cm −2 with density peaks in autumn as a function of habitat. The occurrence of juveniles was different for mediolittora…
The carrying capacity for Mediterranean bivalve suspension feeders: evidence from analysis of food availability and hydrodynamics and their integrati…
2004
Abstract In order to assess the carrying capacity of two Mediterranean areas, the Incze et al. model and its modification were applied. Our measures were carried out in the Gulf of Gaeta (Central MED), where mussels ( Mytilus galloprovincialis ) are intensively cultivated (production of approximately 200 t per year) and the Gulf of Castellammare (Southern MED), where bivalve culture is not widely practised. Velocities of water current and in field filtration rates were measured in each area. Total suspended matter (TSM), suspended chlorophyll-a (CHLa), lipid, protein and carbohydrate concentrations in the particulate were measured seasonally and used as tools to evaluate the trophic status …
Impact on the water column biogeochemistry of a Mediterranean mussel and fish farm
2002
We investigated and compared the impact of organic loads due to the biodeposition of mussel and fish farms on the water column of a coastal area of the Tyrrhenian Sea (Western Mediterranean). Physico-chemical data (including oxygen, nutrients, DOC and particulate organic matter), microbial variables (picoplankton and picophytoplankton density and biomass) and phytoplankton biomass (as chlorophyll-a) were determined on a monthly basis from March 1997 to February 1998. The results of this study indicate that both fish farm and mussel culture did not alter significantly dissolved inorganic phosphorus and chlorophyll-a values, while inorganic nitrogen concentrations were higher in mussel farm a…
Combining heat-transfer and energy budget models to predict thermal stress in Mediterranean intertidal mussels
2011
Recent studies have emphasised that organisms can experience physiological stress well within their geographic range limits. Developing methods for mechanistically predicting the presence, absence and physiological performance of organisms is therefore important because of the ongoing effects of climate change. In this study, we merged a biophysical–ecological (BE) model that estimates the aquatic (high tide) and aerial (low tide) body temperatures of Mytilus galloprovincialis with a Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) model to predict growth, reproduction and mortality of this Mediterranean mussel in both intertidal and subtidal environments. Using weather and chlorophyll-a data from three Mediter…
Ecological signature of the end-Triassic biotic crisis: what do bivalves have to say?
2012
In order to understand the causes underlying the Triassic-Jurassic (T/J) mass extinction, we tested different bivalve features for extinction selectivity, i.e. shell mineralogy, age at the Rhaetian and three main autoecologic traits (feeding mechanism, tiering and motility/attachment). Also, diversity and turnover rates throughout the Triassic and the Early Jurassic were analysed in detail. The dataset employed for this analysis was a precise database at genus level including data from Induan to Sinemurian times. Results point to a true mass extinction for bivalves around the T/J boundary. This extinction was not ageselective at the boundary. Certain analyses suggested that shell mineralogy…
Two tissue-specific loci for octopine dehydrogenase in Tapes Decussatus (Bivalvia, Veneridae)
1992
Abstract 1. 1. Octopine dehydrogenase catalyses the reductive condensation of pyruvate and arginine to produce octopine in mollusc tissues. 2. 2. In all Bivalvia species studied to date, a single polymorphic locus, anodally migrating, was demonstrated. 3. 3. We studied, by starch gel electrophoresis, octopine isozymes in Tapes decussatus tissues. 4. 4. A polymorphic anodal form is present in adductor muscle, foot muscle, mantle and gill. 5. 5. A hepatopancreas-specific form, cathodally migrating, is also evident.
Numerical Taxonomy of Aerobic, Gram-negative Bacteria associated with Oysters and Surrounding Seawater of the Mediterranean Coast
1995
Abstract A numerical taxonomic study was performed on 245 strains of heterotrophic, aerobic, marine bacteria, plus 26 reference strains. The isolates were obtained from oysters and seawater sampled monthly over one year, by direct plating on Marine Agar. The strains were characterised by 93 morphological, biochemical, physiological and nutritional tests. Clustering yielded 46 phena at 0.60 S level (S J coefficient). Some could be identified as species of Alteromonas, Shewanella, Deleya, Flavobacterium, Oceanospirillum, Pseudomonas and marine Agrobacterium -like organisms, others were unidentified groups. Several phena seem to correspond to as yet undescribed taxa.
Numerical Taxonomy of Vibrionaceae Isolated from Oysters and Seawater Along an Annual Cycle
1994
Summary A numerical taxonomic study on Gram negative heterotrophic facultative anaerobic bacteria isolated from marine samples (oysters and seawater of Western Mediterranean Sea) was performed. Three hundred sixty eight strains, including reference strains of most species of the Vibrionaceae , were characterized (96 tests per strain). Cluster analysis of similarity matrices obtained with S SM and S J coefficients was performed and S J -based tree and 0.75 S level selected for definition of phena. Larger phena corresponded to non-luminescent Vibrio splendidus biotype 1 and V. harveyi . The species V. tubiashii (an oyster larvae pathogen), V. pelagius, V. mediterranei, V. orientalis and Photo…
Leukoma antiqua (Bivalvia) - A high-resolution marine paleoclimate archive for southern South America?
2018
The Patagonian Sea in the SW Atlantic is one of the most productive marine ecosystems worldwide. Besides its economic relevance, this shelf sea serves as a major sink for atmospheric CO2 and thus plays a major role in global climate. Despite that, the marine climate dynamics in that region remain barely known. Instrumental records only cover the last 30 years or so and high-resolution climate archives are currently not available. Here, we explore the possibility to obtain seasonally to inter-annually resolved paleotemperature data from shells of the bivalve mollusk, Leukoma antiqua collected alive from the shallow subtidal zone of the San Jorge Gulf. Results demonstrate that this species gr…
Data for: Leukoma antiqua (Bivalvia) - a high-resolution marine paleoclimate archive for southern South America?
2018
Data for freshwater mixing line, Figure 2 Stable oxygen and carbon isotope data of shells, Td18O(shell) plus 1 sigma errors, instrumental SST, data for Figures 6+7 Temporal Alignment of oxygen isotope data (and temperatures reconstructed thereof), data for Figure 8