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BOLETIN N° 179<br />

Abril 2004<br />

<strong>MATERIAL</strong> <strong>DE</strong><br />

<strong>RECIENTE</strong> <strong>INGRESO</strong>


INTRODUCCIÓN<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

Este boletín pretende dar la información del acervo de reciente ingreso, ya sea por compra,<br />

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

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

dentro del mismo boletín (botón arriba, FIND). Asimismo del lado izquierdo de la<br />

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

contenido de 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 />

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

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

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

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

biblio@ola.icmyl.unam.mx, donde con mucho gusto atenderemos su solicitud. Estamos en<br />

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

correo respectivas.<br />

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

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

Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />

Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.


LIBROS<br />

MUNAWAR, M., S.G. LAWRENCE, I.F. MUNAWAR AND D.F. MALLEY, 2000.<br />

Aquatic ecosystems of Mexico. Status & Scope.—Leiden: Backhuys<br />

Publishers: 435 p.<br />

SCHMIDT-NIELSEN, KNUT, 1997.<br />

Animal Physiology. Adaptation and Environment. Fifth edition.—Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge University Press: 612 p.<br />

RESÚMENES REUNIONES<br />

U.A.B.C.S., 2000. 80th Annual Meeting American Society of Ichthyologists<br />

and Herpetologists.<br />

La Paz, B.C.S., June 14-20, 2000. Program Book and Abstracts: 400 p.<br />

INFORMES<br />

GARCÍA, C., JOAQUIN, REGINALDO DURAZO A., TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER<br />

M. Y BERTHA LAVANIEGOS E. 1999.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 9901. B/O Francisco de Ulloa. Enero 14-enero 31 de<br />

1999. Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología,<br />

CICESE, 126 p. CTECT9906.<br />

GARCÍA, C., JOAQUIN, REGINALDO DURAZO A., TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER<br />

M. Y BERTHA LAVANIEGOS E. 2000. Hidrografía en la zona sureña del sistema<br />

de la<br />

Corriente de California Campaña IMECOCAL 9903/04. B/O Francisco de<br />

Ulloa. Marzo 30-abril 17 de 1999. Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones<br />

Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 104 p. CTECT20004.<br />

GARCÍA, C., JOAQUIN, REGINALDO DURAZO A., TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER<br />

M., BERTHA LAVANIEGOS E. Y GILBERTO GAXIOLA C. 2000.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 9908. B/O El Puma . Agosto 8-22 de 1999. Informe<br />

Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 125 p.<br />

CTECT20006.<br />

GARCÍA, C., JOAQUIN, REGINALDO DURAZO A., TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER<br />

M., BERTHA LAVANIEGOS E. Y GILBERTO GAXIOLA C. 2000.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 9910. B/O Francisco Ulloa. Octubre 3-22 de 1999.<br />

Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 129<br />

p. CTECT20005.<br />

3


GARCÍA, C., JOAQUIN, REGINALDO DURAZO A., TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER<br />

M., GILBERTO GAXIOLA C. Y BERTHA LAVANIEGOS E. 2000.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 0001/02. B/O Francisco Ulloa. Enero 14-febrero 2 del<br />

2000. Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología,<br />

CICESE, 134 p. CTECT200011.<br />

GARCÍA CÓRDOVA, JOAQUÍN, ELSA AGUIRRE HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z, DANIEL LOYA<br />

SALINAS, CARMEN BAZÓN GUZMÁN, J. TOMÁS CAMPOS ALFARO Y<br />

GILBERTO GAXIOLA CASTRO. 2001.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del Sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 0004. B/O Francisco Ulloa. Abril 4-23 de 2000. Informe<br />

Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 119 p.<br />

CTECT20012.<br />

GARCÍA CÓRDOVA, JOAQUÍN, ELSA AGUIRRE HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z, DANIEL LOYA<br />

SALINAS Y GILBERTO GAXIOLA CASTRO. 2001.<br />

Hidrografía en la zona sureña del Sistema de la Corriente de California<br />

Campaña IMECOCAL 0007. B/O Francisco Ulloa. Julio 10-31 de 2000.<br />

Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 138<br />

p. CTECT20016.<br />

INTER-AMERICAN TUNA COMMISSION, 2003.<br />

Fishery Status Report No. 1. Tunas and billfishes in the Eastern Pacific<br />

Ocean in 2002. La Jolla, California: 96 p.<br />

NÁJERA MARTÍNEZ, SILA, ELSA AGUIRRE HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z, JOAQUÍN GARCÍA<br />

CÓRDOVA, GILBERTO GAXIOLA CASTRO, REGINALDO DURAZO ARVIZU Y<br />

TIMOTHY BAUMGARTNER. 2001.<br />

Clorofila, oxígeno disuelto y producción primaria durante el crucero<br />

IMECOCAL 9807. Corriente de California. Informe Técnico. Comunicaciones<br />

Académicas, Serie Ecología, CICESE, 75 p. CTECT20015.<br />

TESIS<br />

ALATORRE MENDIETA, MIGUEL ANGEL, 1969.<br />

Método de pronóstico de corriente de marea para el Puerto de San Carlos,<br />

T.B.C. Tesis Profesional. U.N.A.M., Facultad de Ciencias, 46 p.<br />

ALATORRE MENDIETA, MIGUEL ANGEL, 1986.<br />

Sistema de información de la superficie del mar a bordo de los barcos<br />

oceanográficos de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. U.N.A.M.,<br />

UACPyP-CCH-ICML, 94 p.<br />

BUSTOS HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z, IYARI MIYOTTZI, 2004.<br />

4


Efectos del enriquecimiento orgánico sobre la diversidad de copépodos<br />

harpacticoides en el sistema Urías, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México. Tesis<br />

Profesional. U.A.S., Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 107 p.<br />

MORQUECHO ESCAMILLA, LOUR<strong>DE</strong>S, 2004.<br />

Estudio de la dinámica poblacional de dinoflagelados en Bahía Concepción,<br />

Golfo de California: Relación entre las fases quísticas y vegetativa. Tesis<br />

Doctoral. CIBNOR. Programa de Estudios de Posgrado, 76 p. + anexos.<br />

PADILLA GALICIA, ELVIA, 1984.<br />

Estudio cualitativo y cuantitativo de las poblaciones de anélidos poliquetos de<br />

la Plataforma Continental del Sur de Sinaloa. Tesis Profesional. U.N.A.M.,<br />

Facultad de Ciencias, 106 p.<br />

REYES ZAMORA, CÉSAR ALFONSO, 1968.<br />

Estudio analítico y desarrollo armónico de las mareas. Tesis Profesional.<br />

U.N.A.M., Facultad de Ciencias, 78 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE:<br />

Vol. 206, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 72, No. 4, April 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF FISHERIES RESEARCH AGENCY:<br />

No. 8, August 2003.<br />

No. 9, September 2003.<br />

CAHIERS <strong>DE</strong> BIOLOGIE MARINE:<br />

Vol. 44, No. 4, 2003.<br />

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES:<br />

Vol. 60, No. 8, August 2003.<br />

Vol. 60, No. 9, September 2003.<br />

Vol. 60, No. 10, October 2003.<br />

Vol. 60, No. 11, November 2003.<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 1A, febrero de 2004.<br />

Vol. 30, No. 1B, marzo de 2004.<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 18, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

Vol. 18, No. 2, April 2004.<br />

5


CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 76, Part. 10, November 2003.<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 45, No. 1, December 2003.<br />

Vol. 45, No. 3, January 2004.<br />

Vol. 45, No. 5, March 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 3, May 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 23, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 58, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

FAO AQUACULTURE NEWSLETTER:<br />

No. 30, December 2003.<br />

FARO, EL:<br />

No. 37, abril de 2004.<br />

FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 2, March 2004.<br />

GACETA BIOMÉDICAS, U.N.A.M.:<br />

No. 2, febrero de 2004.<br />

No. 3, marzo de 2004.<br />

GACETA UNAM:<br />

No. 3,708, 29 de marzo de 2004.<br />

No. 3,710, 12 de abril de 2004.<br />

No. 3,711, 15 de abril de 2004.<br />

No. 3,712, 19 de abril de 2004.<br />

No. 3,713, 22 de abril de 2004.<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL:<br />

Vol. 21, No. 1, January-February 2004.<br />

Vol. 21, No. 2, March 2004.<br />

Vol. 21, No. 3, April-May 2004.<br />

GEOS:<br />

6


Vol. 23, No. 1, abril de 2003.<br />

Vol. 23, No. 2, noviembre de 2003.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 2, March 2004.<br />

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

No. 267, 17 de marzo de 2004.<br />

No. 278, 31 de marzo de 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF AQUATIC ANIMAL HEALTH:<br />

Vol. 15, No. 3, September 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 2, February 2004.<br />

Vol. 31, No. 3, March 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 2, March-April 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 6, November 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 3, March 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 3, March 2004.<br />

Vol. 26, No. 4, April 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 51, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

Vol. 51, No. 2, March 2004.<br />

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 49, No. 2, March 2004.<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 266, January 30, 2004.<br />

Vol. 267, February 19, 2004.<br />

METEORITO:<br />

No. 42, abril-junio de 2004.<br />

NEW SCIENTIST:<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2433, 7 February, 2004.<br />

7


Vol. 181, No. 2434, 14-20 February, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2435, 21-27 February, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2436, 28 February-March 5, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2437, 6-12 March, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2438, 13-19 March, 2004.<br />

OCEÁNI<strong>DE</strong>S:<br />

Vol. 17, No. 2, 2002.<br />

OCLC NEWSLETTER:<br />

No. 263, January-February-March, 2004.<br />

OPHELIA:<br />

Vol. 57, No. 3, December 2003.<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM. Initial Reports:<br />

Volume 207, Sites 1257-1261 11 January-6 March 2003. Demerara Rise:<br />

Equatorial Cretaceous and Paleogene Paleoceanographic Transect,<br />

Western Atlantic.<br />

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN:<br />

Vol. 289, No. 5, November 2003.<br />

Vol. 289, No. 6, December 2003.<br />

Vol. 290, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

Vol. 290, No. 2 February 2004.<br />

Vol. 290, No. 3, March 2004.<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA:<br />

Vol. 83, No. 1, December 2003.<br />

SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO ZOOLOGY:<br />

No. 618, 2003: Phylogeny of the genera and families of Zeiform fishes, with<br />

comments on their relationships with Tetraodontiforms and Caproids. James<br />

C.<br />

Tyler, Bruce O´Toole and Richard Winterbottom.<br />

No. 621, 2003: Revision of the Western Atlantic Clingfishes of the genus<br />

Tomicodon (Gobiesocidade), with descriptions of five new species. Jeffrey T.<br />

Williams and James C. Tyler.<br />

U2000 Crónica de la Educación Superior:<br />

No. 411, 15 de marzo de 2004.<br />

No. 412, 22 de marzo de 2004.<br />

No. 413, 29 de marzo de 2004.<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 12, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

8


BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN; THE<br />

WOODS HOLE, FEB 2004; VOL. 206, ISS.1<br />

Experimental Evidence That Ovary and Oviducal Gland Extracts Influence Male Agonistic<br />

Behavior in Squids<br />

Kendra C Buresch, Jean G Boal, Gregg T Nagle, Jamie Knowles, et al. ........................................... 1<br />

Contraction and Stiffness Changes in Collagenous Arm Ligaments of the Stalked Crinoid<br />

Metacrinus rotundus (Echinodermata)<br />

Tatsuo Motokawa, Osamu Shintani, Rudiger Birenheide. ..................................................................4<br />

Identification of Juvenile Hormone-Active Alkylphenols in the Lobster Homarus americanus and in<br />

Marine Sediments<br />

William J Biggers, Hans Laufer. ......................................................................................................13<br />

Reproduction and Development of the Conspicuously Dimorphic Brittle Star Ophiodaphne<br />

formata (Ophiuroidea)<br />

Hideyuki Tominaga, Shogo Nakamura, Mieko Komatsu. .................................................................25<br />

Waveform Dynamics of Spermatozeugmata During the Transfer From Paternal to Maternal<br />

Individuals of Membranipora membranacea<br />

M H Temkin, S B Bortolami.............................................................................................................35<br />

Differences in the rDNA-Bearing Chromosome Divide the Asian-Pacific and Atlantic Species of<br />

Crassostrea (Bivalvia, Mollusca)<br />

Yongping Wang, Zhe Xu, Ximing Guo.............................................................................................46<br />

Occurrence in the Field of a Long-Term, Year-Round, Stable Population of Placozoans<br />

Yoshihiko K Maruyama....................................................................................................................55<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY<br />

VOLUME 72 N. 4 APRIL 2004<br />

Development of Oligonucleotide Primers for the Detection of Harmful Microcystis in Water by J. –<br />

E. Cho, S. –W. Bang, M.-S Han ....................................................................................................655<br />

Estimating Heavy Metal Accumulation in Oligochaete Earthworms: A Meta-analysis of Field Data<br />

By W.-C, Ma .................................................................................................................................663<br />

Biassessment of Ecological Risk of Amazonian Ichthyofauna to Mercury By Z. C. Castlhos, N.<br />

Almonsy, P. S. Souto L. C.C. Pereira da Silva, A.l R. Linde, E.D. Bidone ......................................671<br />

Toxicity Assessment of Indian Marine Cyanobacterial Strains by A.S. B. Bhaskar, G. Nidhi, R.<br />

Jayaraj, G. Subramanian, P.V. Lakshmana Rao ...........................................................................680<br />

Carboxanilide Persistence in Wildlife: Excretion and Retention in a Rat Model by S.C. Mitchell,<br />

R.H. Waring .................................................................................................................................686<br />

Novel Temperature Control Apparatus for Whole Effluent Toxicity Tests by l. A. Kszos, P. Braden 692<br />

Toxicity Identification Evaluations (TIEs) of Freshwater Samples Using a Metal Chelating Resin<br />

by H.B. Andersen .........................................................................................................................697<br />

Effects of Sublethal Copper Exposure on Behavior and Growth of Rana pipiens Tadpoles by M.<br />

S. Redick, T.W: La Point ...............................................................................................................706<br />

Kinetic Studies on the Combined Effects of Lanthanum and Cerium on the Growth of Microcystis<br />

aeruginosa and their Accumulation by M. aeruginosa by P.-J. Zhou, J. Lin, H. Shen, T. Li, L.-R.<br />

Song, Y. –W. Shen, Y. –D. Liu ......................................................................................................711<br />

Effect of Cadmium on the Population Dynamics of Moina macrocopa and Macrothrix triserialis<br />

(Cladocera) by G.G. Garcia, S. Nandini, S. S. S. Sarma ...............................................................717<br />

Effect of Cadmium on Hematological Indices of Common Carp (Cyprinus carpio L.)<br />

By J. Drastichová, Z. Svobodová, V. Lusková, J. Máchová ...........................................................725<br />

Effect of Cadmium on Blood Plasma Biochemistry in Carp (Cyprinus carpio L.)<br />

By J. Drastichová, Z. Svobodová, V. Lusková, J. O. Celechovská, p. Kaláb ..................................733<br />

Mineral Composition and Cadmium Accumulation in Oreochromis mossambicus Exposed to<br />

Waterborne Cadmium by H. B. Pratap, S. E. Wendelaar Bonga ....................................................741<br />

9


Effects of Lead as an Environmental Pollutant on EROD Enzyme in Gammarus Pulex (L.)<br />

(Crustacea: Amphipoda) By M. Kutlu, F. Susuz ............................................................................750<br />

Growth and Zinc Accumulation of Sedum alfredii Hance—a Zn Hyperaccumulator as Affected by<br />

Phosphorus Application by W. –Z- Ni, Q. Sun, X. Yang .................................................................756<br />

Sensitivity of Cichlasoma facetum (Cichlidae, Pisces)to Metals by G. D. Bulus Rossini, A. E.<br />

Ronco ..........................................................................................................................................763<br />

Bioaccumulation of Cadmium and Zinc, and Field Validation of Histological Biomarker in<br />

Terrestrial Isopods by J. P. Odendaal, A.J. Reinecke ....................................................................769<br />

Survival and Growth of Hyalella azteca Exposed to Tree Mississippi Oxbow Lake Sediments by<br />

M. T. Moore, R. E. Lizotte, Jr., C. M. Cooper, S. Smith, jr. S.S. Knight ..........................................777<br />

PCBs in Fish of the ardeche River: potential Implications for the Survival of the Other (Lutra<br />

Lutra) by A. Mazet, G. Keck, P. Berny ..........................................................................................784<br />

Kinetic Studies on the Effects of Organophosphorus Pesticides on the Growth of Microcystis<br />

aeruginosa and Uptake of the Phosphorus Forms by p. –J Zhou, H. shen, J. Lin, L. –R. Song, Y.<br />

–D. Liu, Z. –B. Wu ........................................................................................................................791<br />

Paraoxonase Activity in Sera of Four Neotropical Fish by V. L. F. Cunha Bastos, M. V. Alves, G.<br />

Bernardino, P. S. Ceccarelli, J. Cunha Bastos ..............................................................................798<br />

Tracking Toxic Metals in the Ambient Air of Agra City, India by D.G. Gajghate, A.D. Bhanarkar ....806<br />

Residual Effects of sewage Sludge Applied to a Clay Soil on Soil Nitrate Distribution with Three<br />

Different Field Management Practices by S. –M. Lee ....................................................................813<br />

Anaerobic Degradation of the Organochlorine Pesticides DDT and Heptachlor in River Sediment<br />

of Taiwan by T. -C. Chiu, J. –H. Yen, T. –L. Liu, Y.-S. Wang 821<br />

Polycyclic Aromatic Hydocarbons in Street Dust of Niterói City, R.J. Brazil by A.D. Pereira Netto,<br />

I.F. Cunha, F. C. Muniz, E.C.P. Rego ...........................................................................................829<br />

Leaching Potential of Pesticides in a Vegetable Farm in the Cameron Highlands, Malaysia by<br />

B.S. Ismail, C.K. Ngan, U.B. Cheah, W. Y. Wah Abdullah .............................................................836<br />

Heavy Metals in Black Tea Samples Produced in Turkey by I. Narin, H. Colak, O. Turkoglu, M.<br />

Soylak, M. Dogan .........................................................................................................................844<br />

Emission of Biogenic Sulfur Gases from the Microbial Decomposition of Cystine in Chinese Rice<br />

Paddy Soils by j. Zhang, L. Wang, Z. Yang ...................................................................................850<br />

Antimony Concentration in Farming Soil of southern Poland by K. Loska, D. Wiechula, I. Korus ...858<br />

Toxicity of Linear Alkylbenzene Sulfonate and Alkylethoxylate to Aquatic Plants by H. Y. Liu, B. H.<br />

Liao, P. H. Zhou P.Z. Yu ...............................................................................................................866<br />

BULLETIN OF FISHERIES RESEARCH AGENCY<br />

NO. 8 AUGUST 2003<br />

Original Paper<br />

Genetic and morphological of larval and small juvenile tunas (Pisces: Scombridae) caught by<br />

mid-water trawl in the western Pacific<br />

Seinen CHOW, Kenji NOHARA, Toshiyuki TANABE, Tomoyuki ITOH, Sachiko TSUJI, Yasuo<br />

NISHIKAWA, Shoji UYEYANAGI and Kazuhisa UCHIKAWA.............................................................1<br />

Cooper distribution associated with various water masses in the Yellow Sea<br />

Kazuo ABE......................................................................................................................................15<br />

Doctoral Thesis<br />

Evaluation of the fishing village activation effect by fishing ground creation and urban interchange<br />

Yasuji TAMAKI................................................................................................................................22<br />

Abstract (Japanese)......................................................................................................................112<br />

BULLETIN OF FISHERIES RESEARCH AGENCY<br />

NO. 9 AUGUST 2003<br />

Technical Report<br />

10


An accurate scheme for hyperbolic based on the memory saved Cubic Interpolated Pseudoparticle<br />

Method<br />

Kosei KOMATSU..............................................................................................................................1<br />

Doctoral Thesis<br />

Physiological and ecological studies on harmful dinoflagellate Heterocapsa circularisquama- II<br />

Clarification on toxicity of H. circularisquama and its mechanisms causing shellfish kills<br />

Yukihiko MATSUYAMA...................................................................................................................13<br />

Studies on oceanic primary production using ocean color remote sensing data<br />

Takahiko KAMEDA........................................................................................................................118<br />

Abstract (Japanese)......................................................................................................................149<br />

CBM - CAHIERS <strong>DE</strong> BIOLOGIE MARINE<br />

2003 - VOLUME 44 N. 4<br />

JOLLY Marc T., Alex D. ROGERS & Martin SHEA<strong>DE</strong>R. Microgeographic generic variation of<br />

populations of Idotea chelipes (Crustacea: Isopoda) in lagoons of the southern English coast ......319<br />

SANTOS Paulo J. P., Lília P. SOUZA-SANTOS & Jacques CASTEL. Population dynamics of<br />

Nannopus palustris (Copepoda, Harpacticoida) in the oligo-mesohaline area of the Gironde<br />

estuary (France) ...........................................................................................................................329<br />

CHERKAOUI Essediya, Abdellatif BAYED & Christian HILY. Organisation spatiale des<br />

peuplements macrozoobenthiques subtidaux d’un estuaire de la côte atlantique marocaine :<br />

l’estuaire du Bou Regreg ..............................................................................................................339<br />

MONNIOT Françoise. Ascidies coloniales de la ride médio-atlantique récoltées à proximité de<br />

sites hydrothermaux .....................................................................................................................353<br />

SEGONZAC Michel & Enrique MACPHERSON. A new deep-sea lobster of the genus<br />

Thymopides (Crustacea: Decapoda: Nephropidae) collected near the hydrothermal vent Snake<br />

Pit, Mid-Atlantic Ridge ..................................................................................................................361<br />

PEPATO Almir Rogério & Cláudio Gonçalvez TIAGO. A new species of Agauopsis (Halacaridae,<br />

Acari) from Brazil 369<br />

BEDINI Roberto, Maria Grazia CANALI & Andrea BEDINI. Use of camouflaging materials in some<br />

brachyuran crabs of the Mediterranean infralittoral zone ...............................................................375<br />

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

VOLUME 60, NUMBER 8, AUGUST 2003<br />

Spatial distribution of catch and effort in a fishery for snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio): tests of<br />

predictions of the ideal free distribution<br />

Douglas P. Swain and Elmer J. Wade....................................................................................897-909<br />

Stress and saltwater-entry behavior of juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha):<br />

conflicts in physiological motivation<br />

Carol Seals Price and Carl B. Schreck................................................................................... 910-918<br />

Intraspecific density dependence in the dynamics of zooplankton under hypertrophic conditions<br />

Steven Declerck, Vanessa Geenens, Nicole Podoor, José Maria Conde Porcuna, and Luc De<br />

Meester................................................................................................................................. 919-928<br />

Energy losses due to routine and feeding metabolism in young-of-the-year juvenile Atlantic cod<br />

(Gadus morhua)<br />

Myron A. Peck, Lawrence J. Buckley, and David A. Bengtson................................................ 929-937<br />

Understanding latitudinal trends in fish body size through models of optimal seasonal energy<br />

allocation<br />

James E. Garvey and Elizabeth A. Marschall......................................................................... 938-948<br />

Functional responses of haemocytes in the clam Tapes philippinarum from the Lagoon of Venice:<br />

fishing impact and seasonal variations<br />

Valerio Matozzo, Luisa Da Ros, Loriano Ballarin, Francesca Meneghetti, and Maria Gabriella<br />

Marin..................................................................................................................................... 949-958<br />

11


Predicting the location of optimal habitat boundaries for lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in<br />

Canadian Shield lakes<br />

P.J. Dillon, B.J. Clark, L.A. Molot, and H.E. Evans................................................................. 959-970<br />

Differential response of marine populations to climate forcing<br />

Kevin S. McCann, Louis W. Botsford, and Alan Hasting......................................................... 971-985<br />

Quantifying migratory delay: a new application of survival analysis methods<br />

Theodore Castro-Santos and Alex Haro................................................................................ 986-996<br />

Mapping the abundance of riverine fish populations: integrating hierarchical Bayesian models with<br />

a geographic information system (GIS)<br />

Robin J. Wyatt..................................................................................................................... 997-1006<br />

Physical constraints on trout (Oncorhynchus s) distribution in the Cascade Mountains: a<br />

comparison of logged and unlogged streams<br />

Joshua J. Latterell, Robert J. Naiman, Brian R. Fransen, and Peter A. Bisson .................... 1007-1017<br />

Interactions between hatchery and wild salmonids in streams: differences in biology and evidence<br />

for competition<br />

Edward D. Weber and Kurt D. Fausch................................................................................ 1018-1036<br />

Erratum: Implications of life-history invariants for biological reference points used in fishery<br />

management<br />

Erik H. Williams and Kyle W. Shertzer................................................................................ 1037-1037<br />

Canadian Journal of fisheries and Aquatic Sciences<br />

Volume 60, Number 9, September 2003<br />

Among-taxon congruence in biodiversity patterns: can stream insect diversity be predicted using<br />

single taxonomic groups?<br />

Jani Heino, Timo Muotka, Riku Paavola, and Lauri Paasivirta ............................................ 1039-1049<br />

The influence of hatchery coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) on the productivity of wild coho<br />

salmon populations in Oregon coastal basins<br />

Thomas Nickelson ............................................................................................................. 1050-1056<br />

Relationship between natural productivity and the frequency of wild fish in mixed spawning<br />

populations of wild and hatchery steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)<br />

Mark W. Chilcote................................................................................................................ 1057-1067<br />

Finding fish: grouping and catch-per-unit-effort in the Pacific hake (Merluccius productus) fishery<br />

Lore M. Ruttan................................................................................................................... 1068-1077<br />

The effects of adjacent land use on wetland amphibian species richness and community<br />

composition<br />

Jeff E. Houlahan and C. Scott Findlay................................................................................ 1078-1094<br />

Potential impact of forest harvesting on lake chemistry in south-central Ontario at current levels of<br />

acid deposition<br />

S.A. Watmough, J. Aherne, and P.J. Dillon......................................................................... 1095-1103<br />

Bimodal size distributions in Arctic char, Salvelinus alpinus: artefacts of biased sampling<br />

Anders Gravbrøt Finstad, Peder Andreas Jansen, and Heikki Hirvonen.............................. 1104-1110<br />

Small-scale temporal and spatial variation in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) life history<br />

Tara M. McIntyre and Jeffrey A. Hutchings......................................................................... 1111-1121<br />

Detecting juvenile survival effects of habitat actions: power analysis applied to endangered Snake<br />

River spring–summer chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)<br />

Charles M. Paulsen and Timothy R. Fisher......................................................................... 1122-1132<br />

A temperature- and size-dependent model of sand shrimp (Crangon septemspinosa) predation on<br />

juvenile winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus)<br />

David L. Taylor and Jeremy S. Collie.................................................................................. 1133-1148<br />

The effect of turbulence on the cost of swimming for juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)<br />

Eva C. Enders, Daniel Boisclair, and André G. Roy............................................................ 1149-1160<br />

Physical forcing and the dynamics of the pelagic ecosystem in the eastern tropical Pacific:<br />

simulations with ENSO-scale and global-warming climate drivers<br />

George M. Watters, Robert J. Olson, Robert C. Francis, Paul C. Fiedler, Jeffrey J. Polovina,<br />

Stephen B. Reilly, Kerim Y. Aydin, Christofer H. Boggs, Timothy E. Essington, Carl J. Walters,<br />

and James F. Kitchell......................................................................................................... 1161-1175<br />

12


CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

VOLUME 60, NUMBER 10, OCTOBER 2003<br />

Sedimentary Cladoceran remains and their relationship to nutrients and other limnological<br />

variables in 53 lakes from British Columbia, Canada<br />

Darren G. Bos and Brian F. Cumming................................................................................ 1177-1189<br />

Change-in-ratio estimates of lobster exploitation rate using sampling concurrent with fishing<br />

Ross Claytor and Jacques Allard........................................................................................ 1190-1203<br />

Estimation of recruitment in catch-at-age models<br />

Mark N. Maunder and Richard B. Deriso............................................................................. 1204-1216<br />

Extending production models to include process error in the population dynamics<br />

Andre E. Punt..................................................................................................................... 1217-1228<br />

Horizontal and vertical distribution patterns, retention rates, and population dynamics of<br />

zooplankton on Western Bank, Scotian Shelf<br />

Christian S. Reiss, Ian A. McLaren, and Patricia Avendaño................................................ 1229-1244<br />

Planktonic invaders of the St. Lawrence estuarine transition zone: environmental factors<br />

controlling the distribution of zebra mussel veligers<br />

Christine Barnard, Jean-Jacques Frenette, and Warwick F. Vincent................................... 1245-1257<br />

Role of disease in abundance of a Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi) population<br />

Gary D. Marty, Terrance J. Quinn II, Greg Carpenter, Theodore R. Meyers, and Neil H.<br />

Willits................................................................................................................................. 1258-1265<br />

Thermal heterogeneity, stream channel morphology, and salmonid abundance in northeastern<br />

Oregon streams<br />

Joseph L. Ebersole, William J. Liss, and Christopher A. Frissell.......................................... 1266-1280<br />

Fatty acid metabolism in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) tissues: differential incorporation<br />

of palmitate and oleate<br />

Jean-Michel Weber, Gérard Brichon, and Georges Zwingelstein......................................... 1281-1288<br />

The risk of running on empty: the influence of age on starvation and gut fullness in larval Atlantic<br />

cod (Gadus morhua)<br />

Adrian Jordaan and Joseph A. Brown................................................................................. 1289-1298<br />

Comment on "Acoustic seabed classification: improved statistical method"<br />

J.M. Preston and R.L. Kirlin................................................................................................ 1299-1300<br />

Reply to the comment by Preston and Kirlin on "Acoustic seabed classification: improved<br />

statistical method"<br />

Pierre Legendre................................................................................................................. 1301-1305<br />

Erratum: A size-based model of the impacts of bottom trawling on benthic community structure<br />

Daniel E. Duplisea, Simon Jennings, Karema J. Warr, and Tracy A. Dinmore..............................1306<br />

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

VOLUME 60, NUMBER 11, NOVEMBER 2003<br />

The differing crustacean zooplankton communities of Canadian Shield lakes with and without the<br />

nonindigenous zooplanktivore Bythotrephes longimanus<br />

Stephanie A. Boudreau and Norman D. Yan....................................................................... 1307-1313<br />

Zooplankton biomass enhances growth, but not survival, of first-feeding Pomoxis s................... larvae<br />

David B. Bunnell, María J. González, and Roy A. Stein....................................................... 1314-1323<br />

The effect of acute changes in temperature and light on the aerobic metabolism of embryos and<br />

yolk-sac larvae of turbot (Scophthalmus maximus)<br />

Roderick Nigel Finn and Ivar Rønnestad............................................................................. 1324-1331<br />

The role of sewage in a large river food web<br />

Adrian M.H. deBruyn, David J. Marcogliese, and Joseph B. Rasmussen ............................ 1332-1344<br />

Sexual size dimorphism of walleye (Stizostedion vitreum vitreum)<br />

Bryan A. Henderson, Nicholas Collins, George E. Morgan, and Andre Vaillancourt............. 1345-1352<br />

Indirect effects of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) on the planktonic food web<br />

Erik G. Noonburg, Brian J. Shuter, and Peter A. Abrams.................................................... 1353-1368<br />

13


Partitioning of dissolved thallium by seston in Lakes Erie and Ontario<br />

Michael R. Twiss, Benjamin S. Twining, and Nicholas S. Fisher.......................................... 1369-1375<br />

Movement patterns of the tropical shad hilsa (Tenualosa ilisha) inferred from transects of 87 Sr/ 86 Sr<br />

isotope ratios in thºeir otoliths<br />

David A. Milton and Simon R. Chenery............................................................................... 1376-1385<br />

The effect of cloud cover on the development of habitat quality indices for juvenile Atlantic salmon<br />

(Salmo salar)<br />

Philippe Girard, Daniel Boisclair, and Michel Leclerc........................................................... 1386-1397<br />

Assessment of the transferability of biological habitat models for Atlantic salmon parr (Salmo<br />

salar)<br />

J.C. Guay, D. Boisclair, M. Leclerc, and M. Lapointe........................................................... 1398-1408<br />

Migration patterns, ambient temperature, and growth of Icelandic cod (Gadus morhua): evidence<br />

from storage tag data<br />

Ólafur K. Pálsson and Vilhjálmur Thorsteinsson.................................................................. 1409-1423<br />

Anthropogenic introduction of the etiological agent of withering syndrome into northern California<br />

abalone populations via conservation efforts<br />

Carolyn S. Friedman and Carl A. Finley.............................................................................. 1424-1431<br />

Erratum: Comparative growth and feeding in zebra and quagga mussels (Dreissena polymorpha<br />

and Dreissena bugensis): implications for North American lakes<br />

Brad S. Baldwin, Marilyn S. Mayer, Jeffrey Dayton, Nancy Pau, Johanna Mendillo, Maura<br />

Sullivan, Aaron Moore, Aye Ma, and Edward L. Mills...................................................................1432<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS<br />

VOLUMEN (30-1A ), ENERO 2004<br />

Dinámica de nutrientes y fitoplancton en una laguna costera fuertemente afectada por<br />

surgencias.<br />

Nutrient and phytoplankton dynamics at a coastal lagoon strongly affected by coastal upwelling.<br />

Saúl Álvarez-Borrego ..................................................................................................................1-20<br />

Caracterización bioquímica del pasto marino Zostera marina en el límite sur de su distribución en<br />

el Pacífico norte.<br />

Biochemical characterization of the eelgrass Zostera marina at its southern distribution limit in the<br />

North Pacific.<br />

Alejandro Cabello-Pasini, Raquel Muñiz-Salazar y David H.Ward. .............................................21-34<br />

Variabilidad de la comunidad de fitoplancton en Bahía San Quintín estimada mediante el análisis<br />

de pigmentos.<br />

Variability of the phytoplankton community in San Quintín Bay based on pigment analysis.<br />

Roberto Millán-Núñez, E. Millán-Núñez, S. Álvarez-Borrego, C.C. Trees y E. Santamaría-del-<br />

Ángel ........................................................................................................................................35-43<br />

Distribución, movimiento y tamaño de grupo del tursión (Tursiops truncatus) al sur de Bahía San<br />

Quintín, Baja California, México.<br />

Distribution, movement and group size of the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) to the south<br />

of San Quintín Bay, Baja California, Mexico.<br />

E. Morteo, G. Heckel, R.H. Defran y Y. Schramm ......................................................................45-56<br />

Use of digital multispectral videography to assess seagrass distribution in San Quintín Bay, Baja<br />

California, Mexico.<br />

Uso de videografía multiespectral digital para evaluar la distribución del pasto marino en Bahía<br />

San Quintín, Baja California, Mexico.<br />

David H. Ward, T. Lee Tibbitts, Alexandra Morton, Eduardo Carrera-González y Richard<br />

Kempka .....................................................................................................................................57-70<br />

Potencial ostrícola del brazo oeste de Bahía San Quintín: Biomasa actual y estimación preliminar<br />

de la capacidad de carga.<br />

Oyster culture potential of the west basin of San Quintín Bay: Current biomass and preliminary<br />

estimate of the carrying capacity.<br />

Zaul García-Esquivel, Marco Aurelio González-Gómez, Francisco Ley-Lou y Adán Mejía-Trejo .71-84<br />

14


Contribución de la resuspensión de sedimentos a los flujos no conservativos de fósforo<br />

inorgánico disuelto en Bahía San Quintín, Baja California: Una estimación experimental.<br />

Contribution of the sediment resuspension to the non-conservative fluxes of dissolved inorganic<br />

phosphorus in San Quintín Bay, Baja California: An experimental estimate.<br />

M.C. Ortiz-Hernández, V.F. Camacho-Ibar, J.D. Carriquiry, S.E. Ibarra-Obando y L.W. Daessle 85-98<br />

Variación alozímica del ostión japonés Crassostrea gigas en Bahía San Quintín, Baja California,<br />

México.<br />

Allozymic variation of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas from San Quintín Bay, Baja California,<br />

Mexico.<br />

F. Correa, E. Collins, A. Oceguera, B. Cordero y D. Domínguez ..............................................99-107<br />

Modulacion multidecenal de la lluvia invernal en el noroeste de Baja California.<br />

Multidecadal modulation of the winter rainfall in northwestern Baja California.<br />

S. Reyes-Coca y R. Troncoso-Gaytán ...................................................................................109-118<br />

Composición, importancia y movimento de los peces de Bahía de San Quintín, Baja California,<br />

México.<br />

Composition, importance and movement of fishes from San Quintín Bay, Baja California, Mexico.<br />

Jorge A. Rosales-Casián .......................................................................................................119-127<br />

Dinámica de los nutrientes en el brazo oeste de Bahía San Quintín, Baja California, México,<br />

durante y después de "El Niño" 1997/98.<br />

Nutrient dynamics at the west basin of San Quintín Bay, Baja California, Mexico, during and after<br />

the 1997/98 "El Niño".<br />

J.M. Hernández-Ayón, S. Galindo-Bect, V. Camacho-Ibar, Z. García-Esquivel, M. A. González-<br />

Gómez y F. Ley-Lou ..............................................................................................................129-142<br />

Nivel de bienestar de los trabajadores agrícolas en los valles de San Quintín y Mexicali, Baja<br />

California.<br />

Welfare levels of agricultural workers at San Quintín and Mexicali, Baja California.<br />

J.A. Moreno-Mena, y L. M. Niño C. ........................................................................................143-153<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS<br />

FEBRERO 2004 VOLUMEN 30, NUMERO 1A, PAGINAS 1-153<br />

Dinámica de nutrientes y fitoplancton en una laguna costera fuertemente afectada por surgencias<br />

costeras<br />

Saúl Álvarez-Borrego...................................................................................................................1-19<br />

Caracterización bioquímica del pasto marino Zostera marina en el límite sur de su distribución en<br />

el Pacífico Norte.<br />

Alejandro Cabello-Pasini, Raquel Muñiz-Salazar y David H. Ward..............................................21-34<br />

Distribución, movimientos y tamaño de grupo del tursión (Tursiops truncatus) al sur de Bahía San<br />

Quintín, Baja California, México<br />

E. Morteo, G. Heckel, R.H. Defran y Y. Schramm...................................................................... 35-46<br />

Uso de videografía multiespectral digital para evaluar la distribución del pasto marino en Bahía<br />

San Quintín, Baja California, México<br />

David H. Ward, T. Lee Tibbitts, Alexandra Morton, Eduardo Carrera-Gonzalez y Richard Kempka 47-60<br />

Potencial ostrícola del brazo oeste de Bahía San Quintín: Biomasa actual y estimación preliminar<br />

de la capacidad de carga<br />

Zaul García-Esquivel, Marco Aurelio González-Gómez, Francisco Ley-Lou y Adán Mejía-Trejo..61-74<br />

Contribución de la resuspensión de sedimentos a los flujos no conservativos de fósforos<br />

inorgánico disuelto en bahía San Quintín, Baja California: Una estimación experimental<br />

M.C. Ortiz-Hernández, V.F. Camacho-Ibar, J.D. Carriquiry, S.E. Ibarra-Obando y L.W. Daesslé.75-88<br />

Variación alozímica del ostión japonés Crassostrea gigas en Bahía San Quintín, Baja California,<br />

México.<br />

F. Correa, E. Collins, A. Oceguera, B. Cordero y D. Domínguez................................................ 89-97<br />

Modulación multidecenal de la lluvia invernal en el noroeste de Baja California<br />

Sergio Reyes-Coca y Ricardo Troncoso-Gaytán...................................................................... 99-108<br />

Composición, importancia y movimiento de los peces de Bahía San Quintín, Baja California,<br />

México.<br />

15


Jorge A. Rosales-Casián....................................................................................................... 109-117<br />

Dinámica de los nutrientes en el brazo oeste de Bahía San Quintín, Baja California, México,<br />

durante y después de El Niño 1997/98.<br />

J.M. Hernández-Ayón, S. Galindo-Bect, V. Camacho-Ibar, Z. García-Esquivel, M. A. González-<br />

Gómez y F. Ley-Lou...............................................................................................................119-132<br />

Nivel de bienestar de los trabajadores agrícolas en los valles de San Quintín y Mexicali, Baja<br />

California.<br />

J. A. Moreno-Mena, y L. M. Niño-Contreras............................................................................133-143<br />

Variabilidad de la comunidad de fitoplancton en Bahía San Quintín estimada mediante el análisis<br />

de pigmentos.<br />

Roberto Millán-Nuñez, E. Millán-Nuñez, S. Alvarez-Borrego, C.C. Trees y E. Santamaría-Del<br />

Ángel .................................................................................................................................... 145-153<br />

CIENCIAS MARINAS<br />

FEBRERO 2004 VOLUMEN 30, NUMERO 1B, PAGINAS 155-278<br />

Efectos de ángulos y perfiles de las rejillas Nordmore, y otras modificaciones desarrolladas por la<br />

industria, sobre las capturas en una pesquería australiana de peneidos.<br />

Matt K. Broadhurst, Damian J. Young y Cristina Damiano...................................................... 155-168<br />

Temperatura preferida y consumo de oxígeno circadiano de la langosta roja, Panulirus<br />

interruptus (Randall, 1842).<br />

E. Díaz-Iglesias, F. Díaz-Herrera, A.D. Re-Araujo, M. Báez-Hidalgo. M. López-Zenteno, G.<br />

Valdés-Sanchez y A.K. López-Murillo.................................................................................... 169-178<br />

Cultivo intensivo de Litopenaeus vannamei Boone 1931, en un sistema de agua de mar<br />

recirculada.<br />

Benjamín Barón-Sevilla. L. Fernando Buckle-Ramírez y Mónica Hernández-Rodríguez..........179-188<br />

Alginatos de sodio y potasio extraídos del alga Macrocystis pyrifera para usos en materiales para<br />

impresión dental.<br />

R. Reyes-Tisnado, G. Hernández-Carmona, F. López-Gutiérrez, E. J. Vernon-Carter y P. Castro-<br />

Moroyoqui..............................................................................................................................189-199<br />

Captura incidental de agujas y otras especies por palangreros venezolanos en el Mar Caribe y<br />

Océano Atlántico occidental: Periodo 1986-2000.<br />

J.S. Marcano, A. Lárez, X. Gutiérrez, J.J. Alió, H. Salazar y M. Márquez............................... 201-217<br />

Evaluación de la concentración de oxitetraciclina en tejidos de camarón suministrada a través de<br />

nauplios de Artemia y de un baño medicado. A. Roque, C. Cuenca, A. Espinosa, C. Bermúdez,<br />

C. Bolan y B. Gómez-Gil.........................................................................................................219-226<br />

Substitución de la harina de Macrocystis pyrifera por harina de mosto de uva en alimento<br />

balanceado para el abulón azul (Haliotis fulgens)<br />

Rosalva Nava-Guerrero, Carlos Vásquez-Peláez y María Teresa Viana................................ 227-234<br />

Edad y crecimiento de Lithothamnion muelleri (Corallinalese, Rhodophyta) en el suroeste del<br />

Golfo de California, México.<br />

M.G. Rivera, R. Riosmena-Rodríguez y M.S. Foster.............................................................. 235-249<br />

Razón de sexos en poblaciones de Sparisoma radians y Sparisoma atomarium del Archipiélago<br />

de los Roques, Venezuela: Un enfoque evolutivo.<br />

José Renato de Nóbrega y Estrella Villamizar....................................................................... 251-258<br />

Evaluación de las comunidades ícticas litorales de la zona propuesta como Reserva Marina<br />

Gando-Arinaga (Gran Canaria, Islas Canarias) mediante muestreos visuales.<br />

F. Tuya, G.M. Reuss, J. A. Martín, A. Luque.......................................................................... 259-278<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY<br />

FEBRUARY 2004 - VOLUME 18 ISSUE 1<br />

Editorial<br />

1 The Arrogance of America's Designer Ark, Bill Weber<br />

Letters<br />

16


4 Stop the Train!, Kyle Joly<br />

4 Ecoregion as a Pragmatic Tool, William E. Magnusson<br />

5 Letter, Jon C. Gering<br />

6 The Work of Taxonomy, Richard H. Yahner<br />

7 Letter, Tyler Smith<br />

8 Letter, Paul P. Smith, Porter P. Lowry II, Jonathan Timberlake, Janice S. Golding<br />

9 David M. Johns's "Necessity of New Alliances": an Immediate Opportunity, Brian Czech, Pat<br />

Magee, David Trauger, Eugene Allen, Helen Hands<br />

11 Mobilizing Grass-Roots Conservation Education: the Florida Master Naturalist Program,<br />

MARTIN B. MAIN<br />

17 Biodiversity Impacts of Some Agricultural Commodity Production Systems, Paul F. Donald<br />

38 Restoring Balance: Using Exotic Species to Control Invasive Exotic Species, MARK S.<br />

HODDLE<br />

50 The Double-Edged Sword of Biological Control in Conservation and Restoration, SVATA M.<br />

LOUDA, PETER STILING<br />

54 Biological Control of Invasive Species, a Personal Perspective, RAYMOND I. CARRUTHERS<br />

58 Legitimacy and Adoption of a Scientific Biological Control Program: an Institutional Analysis of<br />

Hoddle, W. TREXLER PROFFITT JR.<br />

61 The Strength of Biological Control in the Battle against Invasive Pests: a Reply, MARK S.<br />

HODDLE<br />

Reviews<br />

65 Land Trusts and Conservation Easements: Who Is Conserving What for Whom?, A. M.<br />

MERENLEN<strong>DE</strong>R, L. HUNTSINGER, G. GUTHEY, S. K. FAIRFAX<br />

76 Usefulness of the Umbrella Species Concept as a Conservation Tool, JEAN-MICHEL<br />

ROBERGE, PER ANGELSTAM<br />

Essay<br />

86 Evaluating the Conservation Mission of Zoos, Aquariums, Botanical Gardens, and Natural<br />

History Museums, BRIAN MILLER, WILLIAM CONWAY, RICHARD P. READING, CHRIS<br />

WEMMER, DAVID WILDT, <strong>DE</strong>VRA KLEIMAN, STEVEN MONFORT, ALAN RABINOWITZ,<br />

BETH ARMSTRONG, MICHAEL HUTCHINS<br />

Conservation in Practice<br />

94 Maximizing Offspring Production While Maintaining Genetic Diversity in Supplemental<br />

Breeding Programs of Highly Fecund Managed Species, ANTHONY C. FIUMERA, BRADY<br />

A. PORTER, GREG LOONEY, MARJORIE A. ASMUSSEN, JOHN C. AVISE<br />

Contributed Papers<br />

102 Effects of Climate Change on Population Persistence of Desert-Dwelling Mountain Sheep in<br />

California, CLINTON W. EPPS, DALE R. McCULLOUGH, JOHN D. WEHAUSEN,<br />

VERNON C. BLEICH, JENNIFER L. RECHEL<br />

114 Predicting Human-Carnivore Conflict: a Spatial Model Derived from 25 Years of Data on Wolf<br />

Predation on Livestock, ADRIAN TREVES, LISA NAUGHTON-TREVES, ELIZABETH K.<br />

HARPER, DAVID J. MLA<strong>DE</strong>NOFF, ROBERT A. ROSE, THEODORE A. SICKLEY,<br />

ADRIAN P. WY<strong>DE</strong>VEN<br />

126 Use of Riparian Corridors and Vineyards by Mammalian Predators in Northern California,<br />

JODI A. HILTY, ADINA M. MERENLEN<strong>DE</strong>R<br />

148 Forest Fragmentation Increases Nest Predation in the Eurasian Treecreeper, ESA HUHTA,<br />

TEIJA AHO, ARI JÄNTTI, PETRI SUORSA, MARKKU KUITUNEN, ARI NIKULA, HARRI<br />

HAKKARAINEN<br />

156 Limited Utility of mtDNA Markers for Determining Connectivity among Breeding and<br />

Overwintering Locations in Three Neotropical Migrant Birds<br />

IRBY J. LOVETTE, SONYA M. CLEGG, THOMAS B. SMITH<br />

167 Beyond Species Richness: Community Similarity as a Measure of Cross-Taxon Congruence<br />

for Coarse-Filter Conservation<br />

17


JEFFREY C. SU, DIANE M. <strong>DE</strong>BINSKI, MARK E. JAKUBAUSKAS, KELLY KINDSCHER<br />

174 Effects of Forest Management on Amphibians and Reptiles in Missouri Ozark Forests<br />

ROCHELLE B. RENKEN, WENDY K. GRAM, <strong>DE</strong>BRA K. FANTZ, STEPHEN C. RICHTER,<br />

TIMOTHY J. MILLER, KEVIN B. RICKE, BRADLEY RUSSELL, XIAOYIN WANG<br />

189 Selection of Priority Areas for Fish Conservation in Guadiana River Basin, Iberian Peninsula<br />

A. F. FILIPE, T. A. MARQUES, S. SEABRA , P. TIAGO, F. RIBEIRO, L. MOREIRA DA<br />

COSTA, I. G. COWX, M. J. COLLARES-PEREIRA<br />

201 Downstream Effects of Erosion from Small-Scale Gold Mining on the Instream Habitat and<br />

Fish Community of a Small Neotropical Rainforest Stream<br />

JAN H. MOL, PAUL E. OUBOTER<br />

227 Local Species Richness of Leaf-Chewing Insects Feeding on Woody Plants from One<br />

Hectare of a Lowland Rainforest<br />

V. NOVOTNY, Y. BASSET, S. E. MILLER, R. L. KITCHING, M. LAIDLAW, P. DROZD, L. CIZEK<br />

238 Influence of Elevation, Land Use, and Landscape Context on Patterns of Alien Plant<br />

Invasions along Roadsides in Protected Areas of South-Central Chile<br />

ANÍBAL PAUCHARD, PAUL B. ALABACK<br />

Research Note<br />

249 Loss of Forest Cover in Kalimantan, Indonesia, Since the 1997-1998 El Niño<br />

D. O. FULLER, T. C. JESSUP, A. SALIM<br />

Comments<br />

255 Integrating Phylogenetic Diversity, Complementarity, and Endemism for Conservation<br />

Assessment<br />

DANIEL P. FAITH, C. A. M. REID, JAMES HUNTER<br />

262 On Words, Tests, and Applications: Reply to Faith et al.<br />

PAULA POSADAS, DANIEL RAFAEL MIRANDA-ESQUIVEL, JORGE V. CRISCI<br />

267 Role of Ecological History in Invasive Species Management and Conservation<br />

C. JOSH DONLAN, PAUL S. MARTIN<br />

270 Deep-History Perspective on Biological Invasions: Response to Donlan and Martin<br />

DAVID M. LODGE, KRISTIN SHRA<strong>DE</strong>R-FRECHETTE<br />

Diversity<br />

272 Rapid Adaptation and Conservation<br />

CRAIG A. STOCKWELL, MARY V. ASHLEY<br />

274 Defining Leadership in Conservation: a View from the Top<br />

JAMES M. DIETZ, RINA AVIRAM, SOPHIA BICKFORD, KAREN DOUTHWAITE, AMY<br />

GOODSTINE, JOSE-LUIS IZURSA, STEPHANIE KAVANAUGH, KATIE MacCARTHY,<br />

MICHELLE O'HERRON, KERI PARKER<br />

Book Reviews<br />

279 A Fitting Tribute<br />

J. A. Estes<br />

280 So, Do You Believe Me Now?<br />

John P. Ebersole<br />

281 Historical Ecology for Conservation Managers<br />

Menna E. Jones<br />

283 Everything You Wanted to Know About Conservation Biology<br />

Andrew T. Smith<br />

284 Conservation Biology for Biologists<br />

Craig A. Stockwell<br />

286 Bio[statistics]philia<br />

Erica Fleishman<br />

288 Summary and Synthesis for Neotropical Mammals<br />

Rurik List<br />

288 Recently Received Books July to September 2003<br />

18


Erratum<br />

289 Erratum<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY<br />

APRIL 2004 - VOLUME 18 ISSUE 2 PAGE 291-595<br />

Editorial<br />

291 Forging Research Partnerships across the Academic-Agency Divide<br />

ELIZABETH J. FARNSWORTH<br />

Letter<br />

294 The Role of Open Space in Urban Planning<br />

SAMUEL B. MERRILL<br />

Conservation in Context<br />

295 Hope in Hard Times<br />

DAVID W. ORR<br />

299 Scanning the Horizon for Hope<br />

MARY EVELYN TUCKER<br />

301 Other Responses to "Hope"<br />

DAVID W. ORR<br />

Reviews<br />

302 Recovery of Faunal Communities During Tropical Forest Regeneration<br />

ROBERT R. DUNN<br />

310 A Review of Feral Cat Eradication on Islands<br />

MANUEL NOGALES, AURELIO MARTÍN, BERNIE R. TERSHY, C. JOSH DONLAN, DICK<br />

VEITCH, NÉSTOR PUERTA, BILL WOOD, JESÚS ALONSO<br />

Essays<br />

320 The Last Mile: How to Sustain Long-Distance Migration in Mammals<br />

JOEL BERGER<br />

332 Application of the One-Migrant-per-Generation Rule to Conservation and Management<br />

JINLIANG WANG<br />

344 The Near Extinction of Two Large European Predators: Super Specialists Pay a Price<br />

MIGUEL FERRER, JUAN JOSÉ NEGRO<br />

Conservation in Practice<br />

350 Using Decision Modeling with Stakeholders to Reduce Human-Wildlife Conflict: a Raptor-<br />

Grouse Case Study<br />

S. M. REDPATH, B. E. ARROYO, F. M. LECKIE, P. BACON, N. BAYFIELD, R. J.<br />

GUTIÉRREZ, S. J. THIRGOOD<br />

360 A Risk-Assessment System for Screening Out Invasive Pest Plants from Hawaii and Other<br />

Pacific Islands<br />

CURTIS C. DAEHLER, JULIE S. <strong>DE</strong>NSLOW, SHAHIN ANSARI, HUANG-CHI KUO<br />

Conservation Focus<br />

369 Truly Artificial Nest Studies<br />

JOHN FAABORG<br />

371 Don't Put All Your Eggs in Real Nests: a Sequel to Faaborg<br />

MARC-ANDRÉ VILLARD, TOMAS PÄRT<br />

373 Differences in Predators of Artificial and Real Songbird Nests: Evidence of Bias in Artificial<br />

Nest Studies<br />

FRANK R. THOMPSON III, DIRK E. BURHANS<br />

381 Patterns of Nest Predation on Artificial and Natural Nests in Forests<br />

DAWN M. BURKE, KEN ELLIOTT, LEVI MOORE, WENDY DUNFORD, ERICA NOL,<br />

JUDITH PHILLIPS, STEPHEN HOLMES, KATHRYN FREEMARK<br />

19


389 Evidence of an Edge Effect on Avian Nest Success<br />

PÉTER BATÁRY, ANDRÁS BÁLDI<br />

Contributed Papers<br />

401 Public Preferences for Compensatory Mitigation of Salt Marsh Losses: a Contingent Choice<br />

of Alternatives<br />

DANA MARIE BAUER, NICOLE E. CYR, STEPHEN K. SWALLOW<br />

412 Gap Analysis of Conserved Genetic Resources for Forest Trees<br />

SARA R. LIPOW, KENNETH VANCE-BORLAND, J. BRADLEY ST. CLAIR, JAN<br />

HEN<strong>DE</strong>RSON, CINDY McCAIN<br />

424 Demographic Effects of Collecting Rattan Cane and Their Implications for Sustainable<br />

Harvesting<br />

STEPHEN F. SIEBERT<br />

432 Conserving Slow-Growing, Long-Lived Tree Species: Input from the Demography of a Rare<br />

Understory Conifer, Taxus floridana<br />

CHARLES KWIT, CAROL C. HORVITZ, WILLIAM J. PLATT<br />

444 Indirect Effects of Biological Control on Plant Diversity Vary across Sites in Montana<br />

Grasslands<br />

PETER LESICA, DAVID HANNA<br />

455 Defining Conservation Strategies with Historical Perspectives: a Case Study from a<br />

Degraded Oak Grassland Ecosystem<br />

ANDREW S. MacDOUGALL, BRENDA R. BECKWITH, CARRINA Y. MASLOVAT<br />

466 The Threat of Transformation: Quantifying the Vulnerability of Grasslands in South Africa<br />

KIRSTEN S. NEKE, MORNÉ A. DU PLESSIS<br />

478 Significance of Specimen Databases from Taxonomic Revisions for Estimating and Mapping<br />

the Global Species Diversity of Invertebrates and Repatriating Reliable Specimen Data<br />

RUDOLF MEIER, TORSTEN DIKOW<br />

489 A Quantitative Conservation Approach for the Endangered Butterfly Maculinea alcon<br />

MICHIEL F. WallisDeVries<br />

500 Habitat Linkages and the Conservation of Tropical Biodiversity as Indicated by Seasonal<br />

Migrations of Three-Wattled Bellbirds<br />

GEORGE V. N. POWELL, ROBIN D. BJORK<br />

510 Distribution of Bird Diversity in a Vulnerable Neotropical Landscape<br />

W. DOUGLAS ROBINSON, GEORGE R. ANGEHR, TARA R. ROBINSON, LISA J. PETIT,<br />

DANIEL R. PETIT, JEFFREY D. BRAWN<br />

519 Conspecific Attraction and the Conservation of Territorial Songbirds<br />

MICHAEL P. WARD, SCOTT SCHLOSSBERG<br />

526 Integrating Landscape and Metapopulation Modeling Approaches: Viability of the Sharp-<br />

Tailed Grouse in a Dynamic Landscape<br />

H. REIT AKÇAKAYA, VOLKER C. RA<strong>DE</strong>LOFF, DAVID J. MLA<strong>DE</strong>NOFF, HONG S. HE<br />

538 Factors Related to Fecal Corticosterone Levels in California Spotted Owls: Implications for<br />

Assessing Chronic Stress<br />

DOUGLAS J. TEMPEL, R. J. GUTIÉRREZ<br />

548 Manipulation of Olfactory Signaling and Mate Choice for Conservation Breeding: a Case<br />

Study of Harvest Mice<br />

S.C. ROBERTS, L.M. GOSLING<br />

557 Climatic Suitability, Life-History Traits, Introduction Effort, and the Establishment and Spread<br />

of Introduced Mammals in Australia<br />

DAVID M. FORSYTH, RICHARD P. DUNCAN, MARY BOMFORD, GEOFF MOORE<br />

Research Note<br />

570 Extinction Rate Estimates for Plant Populations in Revisitation Studies: Importance of<br />

Detectability<br />

MARC KÉRY<br />

Diversity<br />

20


575 Managing the Amazon Timber Industry<br />

DANIEL NEPSTAD, CLAUDIA AZEVEDO-RAMOS, EIRIVELTHON LIMA, DAVID<br />

McGRATH, CÁSSIO PEREIRA, FRANK MERRY<br />

578 International Conservation Organizations and the Fate of Local Tropical Forest Conservation<br />

Initiatives<br />

CLAUDIA ROMERO, GERMÁN I. ANDRA<strong>DE</strong><br />

581 Conservation in the Urban-Countryside Interface: a Cautionary Note from Italy<br />

CORRADO BATTISTI, SPARTACO GIPPOLITI<br />

584 New, Flexible Bayesian Approaches to Revolutionize Conservation Genetics<br />

GIORGIO BERTORELLE, MIKE BRUFORD, CLAUDIO CHEMINI, CRISTIANO VERNESI,<br />

HEIDI C. HAUFFE<br />

Book Reviews<br />

585 Elegant Arguments<br />

PEGGIE L. FIEDLER Book Review Editor<br />

585 One World: the Ethics of Globalization<br />

PHILIP CAFARO<br />

CRUSTACEANA<br />

VOLUME 76, NO. 10, 2003<br />

Distribution of isopods (Peracarida, Isopoda) associated with prop roots of Rhizophora mangle in<br />

a tropical coastal lagoon, southeastern Gulf of California, Mexico<br />

Marcelo Garcıa-Guerrero & Michel E. Hendrickx .........................................................................1153<br />

Methyl farnesoate stimulates gonad development in Macrobrachium malcolmsonii (H. Milne<br />

Edwards) (Decapoda, Palaemonidae)<br />

G. Purna Chandra Nagaraju, N. J. Suraj & P. Sreenivasula Reddy .............................................1171<br />

A new subterranean amphipod of the genus Procrangonyx from Beijing, China<br />

Zhong-E Hou & Shuqiang Li .......................................................................................................1179<br />

The fishery and reproductive biology of barking crayfish, Linuparus trigonus (Von Siebold, 1824)<br />

along Queenslands east coast<br />

J. A. Haddy, D. P. Roy & A. J. Courtney .....................................................................................1189<br />

Caligus planktonis Pillai (Copepoda, Siphonostomatoida) parasitic on the largescale mullet of<br />

Taiwan<br />

Ju-Shey Ho & Ching-Long Lin.................................................................................................... 1201<br />

A first fossil record of the terrestrial crab, Geothelphusa tenuimanus (Miyake & Minei, 1965)<br />

(Decapoda, Brachyura, Potamidae) from Okinawa Island, central Ryukyus, Japan<br />

Tohru Naruse, Hiroaki Karasawa, Shigemitsu Shokita, Toshio Tanaka & Mitsuru Moriguchi ........1211<br />

Recognition of two subfamilies in the Potamidae Ortmann, 1896 (Brachyura, Potamidae) with a<br />

note on the genus Potamon Savigny, .........................................................................................1816<br />

Darren C. J. Yeo & Peter K. L. Ng 1219<br />

Hermit crabs of the genus Calcinus Dana, 1851 from Japan and adjacent waters (Decapoda,<br />

Anomura, Diogenidae): a colour variant of C. hazletti Haig & McLaughlin<br />

Akira Asakura .............................................................................................................................1237<br />

Two new species of the genus Goneplax (Decapoda, Brachyura, Goneplacidae) from East Asia<br />

Hironori Komatsu & Masatsune Takeda ......................................................................................1243<br />

The epi- to bathypelagic Mysidacea (Peracarida) off the Selvagens, Canary, and Cape Verde<br />

Islands (NE Atlantic), with first description of the male of Longithorax alicei H. Nouvel, 1942<br />

Karl J. Wittmann, Fatima Hernández, Jeanette Dürr, Esther Tejera, José A. González &<br />

Sebastián Jiménez .....................................................................................................................1257<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS<br />

JANUARY 2004, VOLUME 10, ISSUE 1<br />

21


1. The biogeography of invasive alien plants in California: an application of GIS and spatial<br />

regression analysis<br />

Dark S.J.................................................................................................................................... 1-9(9)<br />

2. Introduced plants of the invasive Solidago gigantea (Asteraceae) are larger and grow denser<br />

than conspecifics in the native range<br />

Jakobs G.; Weber E.; Edwards P.J., ..................................................................................... 11-19(9)<br />

3. On the importance of patch attributes, environmental factors and past human impacts as<br />

determinants of perennial plant species richness and diversity in Mediterranean semiarid steppes<br />

Maestre F.T., ........................................................................................................................ 21-29(9)<br />

4. Parasite species richness in New Zealand fishes: a grossly underestimated component of<br />

biodiversity?<br />

Poulin R. .............................................................................................................................. 31-37(7)<br />

5. Modelling spatial patterns of biodiversity for conservation prioritization in North-eastern Mexico<br />

Ortega-Huerta M.A.; Peterson A.T. ..................................................................................... 39-54(16)<br />

6. Rapid assessment in conservation research: a critique of avifaunal assessment techniques<br />

illustrated by Ecuadorian and Madagascan case study data<br />

O'Dea N.; Watson J.E.M.; Whittaker R.J. .............................................................................. 55-63(9)<br />

7. Morphological responses of Leymus chinensis (Poaceae) to the large-scale climatic gradient<br />

along the North-east China Transect (NECT)<br />

Renzhong W.; Qiong G......................................................................................................... 65-73(9)<br />

8. The decline of the sea turtles, ........................................................................................... 75-75(1)<br />

9. High biodiversity: an assessment of mountain biodiversity ................................................ 75-76(2)<br />

10. Biodiversity paying its way............................................................................................... 76-77(2)<br />

11. An updated flora of Egypt ............................................................................................... 77-78(2)<br />

12. Terrestrial orchids of the northern temperate zone .......................................................... 78-78(1)<br />

13. How our planet works?, .................................................................................................. 78-79(2)<br />

14. The flora of Nicaragua .................................................................................................... 79-79(1)<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY<br />

VOLUME 45, NUMBER 1<br />

<strong>DE</strong>CEMBER 2003<br />

Observation of isotopes in the water cycle—the Swiss National Network (NISOT) .................... 1 - 11<br />

Marc Schürch, Ronald Kozel, Ulrich Schotterer, et al.<br />

Stable lead isotopes reveal a natural source of high lead concentrations to gasoline-contaminated<br />

groundwater ........................................................................................................................... 12 - 22<br />

J. E. Landmeyer, P. M. Bradley, T. D. Bullen<br />

Subsurface movement of zinc from contaminated dredge spoils at a periodically flooded site . 23 - 34<br />

W. R. Kelly, H. A. Wehrmann, T. R. Holm, et al.<br />

Weathering of sulfidic shale and copper mine waste: secondary minerals and metal cycling in<br />

Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, and North Carolina, USA ........................ 35 - 57<br />

Jane M. Hammarstrom, Robert R. Seal, Allen L. Meier, et al.<br />

The content of some microelements in mineral waters from Covasna and Harghita Romanian<br />

districts ................................................................................................................................... 58 - 64<br />

Gabriela-Raluca Babaua, Anca-Iulia Stoica, Petre Capota, et al.<br />

Evaluation of aluminum speciation in surface waters in China and its environmental risk<br />

assessment ............................................................................................................................ 65 - 71<br />

S. P. Bi, N. Gan, X. C. Lu, et al.<br />

Ammonium adsorption by tidal flat surface sediments from the Yangtze Estuary ..................... 72 - 78<br />

L. J. Hou, M. Liu, H. Y. Jiang, et al.<br />

The stability of the relative content ratios of Cu, Pb and Zn in soils and sediments .................. 79 - 85<br />

Huan-Xin Weng, Xing-Mao Zhang, Xun-Hong Chen, et al.<br />

Geochemical studies to delineate topsoil contamination around an ash pond of a coal-based<br />

thermal power plant in India .................................................................................................... 86 - 97<br />

T. Praharaj, S. Tripathy, M. A. Powell, et al.<br />

22


Analyses of trace elements on quartz surfaces in sulfidic mine tailings from Kristineberg (Sweden)<br />

a few years after remediation ................................................................................................ 98 - 105<br />

B. Müller, M. D. Axelsson, B. Öhlander<br />

The hydrogeochemistry of the Lake Waco drainage basin, Texas ....................................... 106 - 114<br />

S. I. Dworkin<br />

Relationship of chemical fractions of heavy metals with microbial and enzyme activities in sludge<br />

and ash-amended acid lateritic soil from India .................................................................... 115 - 123<br />

D. Chaudhuri, S. Tripathy, H. Veeresh, et al.<br />

A nonlinear modeling and forecasting system of earth fractures based on coupling of artificial<br />

neural network and geographical information system—exemplified by earth fractures in Yuci City,<br />

Shanxi, China ..................................................................................................................... 124 - 131<br />

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

Eigendecomposition of TDR waveforms: a novel method to determine water content and pore<br />

fluid concentration of sandy soils ........................................................................................ 132 - 143<br />

A. M. O. Mohamed, R. A. Said, M. Y. El-Bassiouni<br />

Book reviews<br />

December 2003 .................................................................................................................. 144 - 145<br />

Events<br />

December 2003 .................................................................................................................. 146 – 148<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY<br />

VOLUME 45, NUMBER 3<br />

JANUARY 2004<br />

Velocity and runout simulation of destructive debris flows and debris avalanches in pyroclastic<br />

deposits, Campania region, Italy ......................................................................................... 295 - 311<br />

Paola Revellino, Oldrich Hungr, Francesco M. Guadagno, et al.<br />

An assessment of the risk associated with urban development in the Thiaroye area (Senegal)<br />

............................................................................................................................................312 - 322<br />

Seynabou Cissé Faye, Serigne Faye, Stefan Wohnlich, et al.<br />

Water quality modeling of the Cahaba River, Alabama ........................................................ 323 - 338<br />

Dahlia N. El-Kaddah, Anne E. Carey<br />

Geostatistical analysis of soil moisture measurements and remotely sensed data at different<br />

spatial scales ..................................................................................................................... 339 - 349<br />

Shakil Ahmad Romshoo<br />

Salinization in coastal aquifers of arid zones: an example from Santo Domingo, Baja California<br />

Sur, Mexico ........................................................................................................................ 350 - 366<br />

A. Cardona, J. J. Carrillo-Rivera, R. Huizar-Álvarez, et al.<br />

Impacts of surface mine valley fills on headwater floods in eastern Kentucky ...................... 367 - 380<br />

Jonathan D. Phillips<br />

Environmental impacts of Baltim and Ras El Bar shore-parallel breakwater systems on the Nile<br />

delta littoral zone, Egypt ..................................................................................................... 381 - 390<br />

O. E. Frihy, M. M. El Banna, A. I. El Kolfat<br />

Is groundwater in the Tarkwa gold mining district of Ghana potable? .................................. 391 - 400<br />

Jerry S. Kuma<br />

Specific vulnerability assessment using the MLPI model in Datong city, Shanxi province,<br />

China ................................................................................................................................. 401 - 407<br />

Huaming Guo, Yanxin Wang<br />

Land degradation assessment based on environmental geoindicators in the Fortaleza<br />

metropolitan region, state of Ceará, Brazil .......................................................................... 408 - 425<br />

L. V. Zuquette, O. J. Pejon, J. Q. dos Santos Collares<br />

Selenium source in the selenosis area of the Daba region, South Qinling Mountain, China . 426 - 432<br />

Luo Kunli, Xu Lirong, Tan Jian'an, et al.<br />

Book reviews<br />

23


January 2004 ..................................................................................................................... 433 - 434<br />

Events<br />

January 2004 ..................................................................................................................... 435 – 438<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY<br />

VOLUME 45, NUMBER 5<br />

MARCH 2004<br />

Cartographic techniques for mapping the geochemical data of stream sediments: the “Sample<br />

Catchment Basin” approach ............................................................................................... 593 - 599<br />

M. Spadoni, G. Cavarretta, A. Patera<br />

Managing groundwater rise: Experimental results and modelling of water pumping from a quarry<br />

lake in Milan urban area (Italy) ............................................................................................ 600 - 608<br />

Giovanni Pietro Beretta, Monica Avanzini, Adelio Pagotto<br />

A laboratory study of covers made of low-sulphide tailings to prevent acid mine drainage ... 609 - 622<br />

B. Bussière, M. Benzaazoua, M. Aubertin, et al.<br />

A field evaluation of enhanced reductive dechlorination of chlorinated solvents in groundwater,<br />

New York Metropolitan Area ............................................................................................... 623 - 632<br />

Eric Rodriguez, Kevin A. McGuinness, Duke U. Ophori<br />

The influence of cyanide complexation on the speciation and solubility of radionuclides in a<br />

geological repository .......................................................................................................... 633 - 646<br />

Wolfgang Hummel<br />

Analysis of the exchange of groundwater and river water by using Radon-222 in the middle Heihe<br />

Basin of northwestern China ............................................................................................... 647 - 653<br />

Y. Wu, X. Wen, Y. Zhang<br />

Magnetic studies applied to different environments (soils and stream sediments) from a relatively<br />

polluted area in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina .............................................................. 654 - 664<br />

M. A. E. Chaparro, J. C. Bidegain, A. M. Sinito, et al.<br />

A comparison of the GIS based landslide susceptibility assessment methods: multivariate versus<br />

bivariate ............................................................................................................................. 665 - 679<br />

Mehmet Lütfi Süzen, Vedat Doyuran<br />

Effects of coal fly ash amended soils on trace element uptake in plants .............................. 680 - 689<br />

S. S. Brake, R. R. Jensen, J. M. Mattox<br />

Nature and human impact on Nile Delta coastal sand dunes, Egypt .................................... 690 - 695<br />

Mahmoud M. El Banna<br />

Significance of Dar-Zarrouk parameters in the exploration of quality affected coastal aquifer<br />

systems .............................................................................................................................. 696 - 702<br />

U. K. Singh, R. K. Das, G. K. Hodlur<br />

Irrigation effects on the salinity of the Arba and Riguel Rivers (Spain): present diagnosis and<br />

expected evolution using geochemical models .................................................................... 703 - 715<br />

J. Causapé, L. Auqué, Mª J. Gimeno, et al.<br />

Arsenic in contaminated soils and anthropogenic deposits at the Mokrsko, Roudný, and<br />

Kašperské Hory gold deposits, Bohemian Massif (CZ) ........................................................ 716 - 730<br />

Michal Filippi, Viktor Goliáš, Zdenek Pertold<br />

Accumulation of heavy metals in Oostriku peat bog, Estonia: -site description, conceptual<br />

modelling and geochemical modelling of the source of the metals ....................................... 731 - 740<br />

K. Syrovetnik, E. Puura, I. Neretnieks<br />

Book reviews<br />

March 2004 ........................................................................................................................ 741 - 742<br />

Events<br />

March 2004 ........................................................................................................................ 743 – 746<br />

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL<br />

24


VOLUME 30, ISSUE 3<br />

1. Revegetating fly ash landfills with Prosopis juliflora L.: impact of different amendments and<br />

Rhizobium inoculation*1 • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 293-300<br />

U. N. Rai , K. Pandey , S. Sinha , A. Singh , R. Saxena and D. K. Gupta<br />

2. Anguilla anguilla L. antioxidants responses to in situ bleached kraft pulp mill effluent outlet<br />

exposure • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 301-308<br />

M. A. Santos , M. Pacheco and Iqbal Ahmad<br />

3. Assessment of persistent toxic substances in the environment of Egypt • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 309-322<br />

Assem O. Barakat<br />

4. Effect of elemental sulphur on solubility of soil heavy metals and their uptake by maize •<br />

ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 323-328<br />

Yanshan Cui , Yiting Dong , Haifeng Li and Qingren Wang<br />

5. Comparative study of estrogenic potencies of estradiol, tamoxifen, bisphenol-A and resveratrol<br />

with two in vitro bioassays • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 329-335<br />

Wen Li , Martin Seifert , Ying Xu and Bertold Hock<br />

6. Increased risk of preterm delivery among people living near the three oil refineries in Taiwan •<br />

ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 337-342<br />

Chun-Yuh Yang , Chih-Ching Chang , Hung-Yi Chuang , Chi-Kung Ho , Trong-Neng Wu and Po-<br />

Ya Chang<br />

7. Polychlorinated biphenyl residues in deep-sea fish from Mediterranean Sea • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 343-349<br />

M. M. Storelli , A. Storelli , R. D'Addabbo , G. Barone and G. O. Marcotrigiano<br />

8. Effects of soil amendments on lead uptake by two vegetable crops from a lead-contaminated<br />

soil from Anhui, China • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 351-356<br />

Y. -G. Zhu , S. -B. Chen and J. -C. Yang<br />

9. Copper and zinc in four freshwater fish species from Lake Pamvotis (Greece) • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 357-362<br />

I. Papagiannis , I. Kagalou , J. Leonardos , D. Petridis and V. Kalfakakou<br />

10. Screening of halogenated aromatic compounds in some raw material lots for an aluminium<br />

recycling plant • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 363-366<br />

Seija Sinkkonen , Jaakko Paasivirta , Mirja Lahtiperä and Antero Vattulainen<br />

11. Elimination of chloramphenicol, sulphamethoxazole and oxytetracycline in shrimp, Penaeus<br />

chinensis following medicated-feed treatment • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 367-373<br />

Weifen Wang , Hong Lin , Changhu Xue and Jamil Khalid<br />

12. Assessment of application-rate dependent effects of a long-term fire retardant chemical (Fire<br />

Trol 934®) on Typha domingensis germination • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 375-381<br />

David G. Angeler , Marta Rodríguez , Silvia Martín and José M. Moreno<br />

13. Arsenic concentrations in rice, vegetables, and fish in Bangladesh: a preliminary study •<br />

ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 383-387<br />

H. K. Das , A. K. Mitra , P. K. Sengupta , A. Hossain , F. Islam and G. H. Rabbani<br />

14. Scanning electron microscopic studies and growth response of the plants of Helianthus<br />

annuus L. grown on tannery sludge amended soil • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 389-395<br />

Shraddha Singh and Sarita Sinha<br />

25


15. Monitoring of the benzene and toluene contents in human milk • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 397-401<br />

F. Fabietti , A. Ambruzzi , M. Delise and M. R. Sprechini<br />

16.The determination of trace metal pollutants in environmental matrices using ion<br />

chromatography • REVIEW ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 403-431<br />

Matthew J. Shaw and Paul R. Haddad<br />

17. Palaeotempestology: the study of prehistoric tropical cyclones—a review and implications for<br />

hazard assessment • REVIEW ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 433-447<br />

Jonathan Nott<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY<br />

VOLUME 23 NUMBER 1<br />

JANUARY 2004<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY<br />

MICROBIAL TRANSFORMATION OF PYRETHROID INSECTICI<strong>DE</strong>S IN AQUEOUS AND<br />

SEDIMENT PHASES. Sangjin Lee, Jianying Gan, Jong-Sik Kim, John N. Kabashima, and David<br />

E. Crowley, ................................................................................................................................. 1–6.<br />

PHASE DISTRIBUTION OF SYNTHETIC PYRETHROIDS IN RUNOFF AND STREAM WATER.<br />

Weiping Liu, Jay J. Gan, Sangjin Lee, and John N. Kabashima, ............................................... 7–11.<br />

SOURCE OF TOXICITY IN STORM WATER: ZINC FROM COMMONLY USED PAINT. Lynn<br />

Adams Kszos, Gail W. Morris, and Belinda K. Konetsky, ........................................................ 12–16.<br />

METHYLMERCURY PRODUCTION IN HIGH ARCTIC WETLANDS. Lisa L. Loseto, Steven D.<br />

Siciliano, and David R.S. Lean, .............................................................................................. 17–23.<br />

PREDICTING TOXIC EQUIVALENCE FACTORS FROM 13C NUCLEAR MAGNETIC<br />

RESONANCE SPECTRA FOR DIOXINS, FURANS, AND POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS<br />

USING LINEAR AND NONLINEAR PATTERN RECOGNITION METHODS. Dan A. Buzatu,<br />

Richard D. Beger, Jon G. Wilkes, and Jackson O. Lay Jr., ...................................................... 24–31.<br />

TOXICOLOGICAL PROFILING OF SEDIMENTS USING IN VITRO BIOASSAYS, WITH<br />

EMPHASIS ON ENDOCRINE DISRUPTION. Corine J. Houtman, Peter H. Cenijn, Timo Hamers,<br />

Marja H. Lamoree, Juliette Legler, Albertinka J. Murk, and Abraham Brouwer, ........................ 32–40.<br />

REDUCTION OF HALOGENATED ETHANES BY GREEN RUST. Edward J. O'Loughlin and<br />

David R. Burris, ...................................................................................................................... 41–48.<br />

PROFILES OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL CONGENERS, ORGANOCHLORINE<br />

PESTICI<strong>DE</strong>S, AND BUTYLTINS IN SOUTHERN SEA OTTERS AND THEIR PREY.<br />

Kurunthachalam Kannan, Natsuko Kajiwara, Mafumi Watanabe, Haruhiko Nakata, Nancy J.<br />

Thomas, Mark Stephenson, David A. Jessup, and Shinsuke Tanabe, ..................................... 49–56.<br />

BIOAVAILABILITY AND ASSIMILATION OF SEDIMENT-ASSOCIATED BENZO[a]PYRENE BY<br />

ILYODRILUS TEMPLETONI (OLIGOCHAETA). Xiaoxia Lu, Danny D. Reible, and John W.<br />

Fleeger, .................................................................................................................................. 57–64.<br />

IMPORTANCE OF EQUILIBRATION TIME IN THE PARTITIONING AND TOXICITY OF ZINC IN<br />

SPIKED SEDIMENT BIOASSAYS. Jung-Suk Lee, Byeong-Gweon Lee, Samuel N. Luoma, and<br />

Hoon Yoo, .............................................................................................................................. 65–71.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY<br />

THE EFFECTS OF LOW HARDNESS AND pH ON COPPER TOXICITY TO DAPHNIA MAGNA.<br />

Kristen E. Long, Eric J. Van Genderen, and Stephen J. Klaine, ............................................... 72–75.<br />

UPTAKE AND <strong>DE</strong>PURATION OF CADMIUM, NICKEL, AND LEAD IN LABORATORY-<br />

EXPOSED TUBIFEX TUBIFEX AND CORRESPONDING CHANGES IN THE<br />

CONCENTRATION OF A METALLOTHIONEIN-LIKE PROTEIN. Patricia L. Gillis, D. George<br />

Dixon, Uwe Borgmann, and Trefor B. Reynoldson, ................................................................. 76–85.<br />

26


INFLUENCE OF WATER QUALITY AND AGE ON NICKEL TOXICITY TO FATHEAD MINNOWS<br />

(PIMEPHALES PROMELAS). Tham Chung Hoang, Joseph R. Tomasso, and Stephen J. Klaine, 86–92.<br />

EUROPEAN STARLING (STURNUS VULGARIS): AVIAN MO<strong>DE</strong>L AND MONITOR OF<br />

POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL CONTAMINATION AT A SUPERFUND SITE IN SOUTHERN<br />

ILLINOIS, USA. Christine A. Arenal, Richard S. Halbrook, and MaryJo Woodruff, .................. 93–104.<br />

AN ASSESSMENT OF THE BIOACCUMULATION OF ESTRONE IN DAPHNIA MAGNA. Rachel<br />

L. Gomes, Hannah E. Deacon, Ka M. Lai, Jason W. Birkett, Mark D. Scrimshaw, and John N.<br />

Lester, ................................................................................................................................. 105–108.<br />

EFFECTS OF SUBLETHAL FENITROTHION INGESTION ON CHOLINESTERASE INHIBITION,<br />

STANDARD METABOLISM, THERMAL PREFERENCE, AND PREY-CAPTURE ABILITY IN THE<br />

AUSTRALIAN CENTRAL BEAR<strong>DE</strong>D DRAGON (POGONA VITTICEPS, AGAMIDAE). David<br />

Bain, William A. Buttemer, Lee Astheimer, Karen Fildes, and Michael J. Hooper, ................. 109–116.<br />

FIPRONIL EFFECTS ON ESTUARINE COPEPOD (AMPHIASCUS TENUIREMIS)<br />

<strong>DE</strong>VELOPMENT, FERTILITY, AND REPRODUCTION: A RAPID LIFE-CYCLE ASSAY IN 96-<br />

WELL MICROPLATE FORMAT. G. Thomas Chandler, Tawnya L. Cary, David C. Volz, Spencer<br />

S. Walse, John L. Ferry, and Susan L. Klosterhaus, ............................................................ 117–124.<br />

EFFECT OF PRAIRIE GRASS ON THE DISSIPATION, MOVEMENT, AND BIOAVAILABILITY<br />

OF SELECTED HERBICI<strong>DE</strong>S IN PREPARED SOIL COLUMNS. Jason B. Belden, Todd A.<br />

Phillips, and Joel R. Coats, .................................................................................................. 125–132.<br />

TOXICITY OF AMBIENT ATMOSPHERIC PARTICULATE MATTER FROM THE LAKE<br />

MICHIGAN (USA) AIRSHED TO AQUATIC ORGANISMS. Rebecca J. Sheesley, James J.<br />

Schauer, Jocelyn D. Hemming, Miel A. Barman, Steven W. Geis, and James J. Tortorelli, ... 133–140.<br />

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF TNT TOXICITY IN SEDIMENT. Jason M.<br />

Conder, Thomas W. La Point, Jeffery A. Steevens, and Guilherme R. Lotufo, ...................... 141–149.<br />

RELATIVE SENSITIVITY DISTRIBUTION OF AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES TO ORGANIC AND<br />

METAL COMPOUNDS. Peter Carsten von der Ohe and Matthias Liess, .............................. 150–156.<br />

HARBOR SEALS (PHOCA VITULINA) IN BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA, AND WASHINGTON<br />

STATE, USA, REVEAL A COMBINATION OF LOCAL AND GLOBAL POLYCHLORINATED<br />

BIPHENYL, DIOXIN, AND FURAN SIGNALS. Peter S. Ross, Steven J. Jeffries, Mark B. Yunker,<br />

Richard F. Addison, Michael G. Ikonomou, and John C. Calambokidis, ................................ 157–165.<br />

TOXICOKINETICS OF SEDIMENT-ASSOCIATED POLYBROMINATED DIPHENYLETHERS<br />

(FLAME RETARDANTS) IN BENTHIC INVERTEBRATES (LUMBRICULUS VARIEGATUS,<br />

OLIGOCHAETA). Matti T. Leppänen and Jussi V.K. Kukkonen, ........................................... 166–172.<br />

METALLOTHIONEIN-LIKE PROTEIN IN THE LEAST KILLIFISH HETERANDRIA FORMOSA<br />

AND ITS ROLE IN CADMIUM RESISTANCE. Lingtian Xie and Paul L. Klerks, .................... 173–177.<br />

EFFECT OF 3,4,3′,4′-TETRACHLOROBIPHENYL ON THE REWORKING BEHAVIOR OF<br />

LUMBRICULUS VARIEGATUS EXPOSED TO CONTAMINATED SEDIMENT. Peter F. Landrum,<br />

Matti Leppänen, Sander D. Robinson, Duane C. Gossiaux, G. Allen Burton, Marc Greenberg,<br />

Jussi V.K. Kukkonen, Brian J. Eadie, and Margaret B. Lansing, ........................................... 178–186.<br />

COMPARING BEHAVIORAL AND CHRONIC ENDPOINTS TO EVALUATE THE RESPONSE<br />

OF LUMBRICULUS VARIEGATUS TO 3,4,3′,4′-TETRACHLOROBIPHENYL SEDIMENT<br />

EXPOSURES. Peter F. Landrum, Matti Leppänen, Sander D. Robinson, Duane C. Gossiaux, G.<br />

Allen Burton, Marc Greenberg, Jussi V.K. Kukkonen, Brian J. Eadie, and Margaret B. Lansing,<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 187–194<br />

THE EFFECT OF COUNTERION AND PERCOLATION ON THE TOXICITY OF LEAD FOR THE<br />

SPRINGTAIL FOLSOMIA CANDIDA IN SOIL. Marina Bongers, Ben Rusch, and Cornelis A.M.<br />

Van Gestel, ......................................................................................................................... 195–199.<br />

COPPER TOLERANCE IN FATHEAD MINNOWS: I. THE ROLE OF GENETIC AND<br />

NONGENETIC FACTORS. Alan S. Kolok, Elizabeth B. Peake, Laura L. Tierney, Shaun A. Roark,<br />

Robert B. Noble, Kyoungah See, and Sheldon I. Guttman, .................................................. 200–207.<br />

COPPER TOLERANCE IN FATHEAD MINNOWS: II. MATERNAL TRANSFER. Elizabeth B.<br />

Peake, Jessica C. Locke, Laura L. Tierney, and Alan S. Kolok, ............................................ 208–211.<br />

A COMPARISON OF THE SENSITIVITY OF STREAM BENTHIC COMMUNITY INDICES TO<br />

EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH MINES, PULP AND PAPER MILLS, AND URBANIZATION.<br />

Bruce W. Kilgour, Keith M. Somers, and David R. Barton, .................................................... 212–221.<br />

27


MERCURY ACCUMULATION AND LOSS IN MALLARD EGGS. Gary H. Heinz and David J.<br />

Hoffman, ............................................................................................................................. 222–224.<br />

HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT<br />

ENERGY-BASED MO<strong>DE</strong>LING AS A BASIS FOR THE ANALYSIS OF REPRODUCTIVE DATA<br />

WITH THE MIDGE (CHIRONOMUS RIPARIUS). Virginie Ducrot, Alexandre R.R. Péry, Raphaël<br />

Mons, and Jeanne Garric, ................................................................................................... 225–231.<br />

A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF AN ACCELERATED LIFE-TEST MO<strong>DE</strong>L AND A<br />

TOXICOKINETICS-BASED MO<strong>DE</strong>L FOR THE ANALYSIS OF PORCELLIO SCABER SURVIVAL<br />

DATA. Shijin Ren, ............................................................................................................... 232–237.<br />

EVOLUTION<br />

VOL. 58, NO. 1, JANUARY 2004<br />

PERSPECTIVE:IS HUMAN CULTURAL EVOLUTION DARWINIAN? EVI<strong>DE</strong>NCE REVIEWED<br />

FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. • Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten,<br />

and Kevin N. Laland. ................................................................................................................ 1–11.<br />

A LIKELIHOOD-BASED METHOD FOR TESTING FOR NONSTOCHASTIC VARIATION OF<br />

DIVERSIFICATION RATES IN PHYLOGENIES. • Kevin J. McConway and Hallie J. Sims. ..... 12–23.<br />

SOCIAL POLYANDRY, PARENTAL INVESTMENT, SEXUAL SELECTION, AND EVOLUTION<br />

OF REDUCED FEMALE GAMETE SIZE. • Malte Andersson. ................................................. 24–34.<br />

LEARNING AND COLONIZATION OF NEW NICHES: A FIRST STEP TOWARD SPECIATION. •<br />

Joost B. Beltman, Patsy Haccou, and Carel ten Cate. ............................................................. 35–46.<br />

THE QUANTITATIVE GENETICS OF FLUCTUATING ASYMMETRY: A COMPARISON OF TWO<br />

MO<strong>DE</strong>LS. • Derek Roff and Denis Réale. ............................................................................... 47–58.<br />

EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF ADAPTATION IN CLARKIA XANTIANA. I. SOURCES OF TRAIT<br />

VARIATION ACROSS A SUBSPECIES BOR<strong>DE</strong>R. • Vincent M. Eckhart, Monica A. Geber, and<br />

Christopher M. McGuire. ......................................................................................................... 59–70.<br />

BIGGER IS NOT ALWAYS BETTER: CONFLICTING SELECTIVE PRESSURES ON SEED SIZE<br />

IN QUERCUS ILEX. • José M. Gómez. ................................................................................... 71–80.<br />

HABITAT-SPECIFIC PIGMENTATION IN A FRESHWATER ISOPOD: ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION<br />

OVER A SMALL SPATIOTEMPORAL SCALE. • Anders Hargeby, Jonas Johansson, and Jonas<br />

Ahnesjö. ................................................................................................................................. 81–94.<br />

INTERACTIONS AMONG MOTHS, CROSSBILLS, SQUIRRELS, AND LODGEPOLE PINE IN A<br />

GEOGRAPHIC SELECTION MOSAIC. • Adam M. Siepielski and Craig W. Benkman. ........... 95–101.<br />

DOES GENE FLOW CONSTRAIN ADAPTIVE DIVERGENCE OR VICE VERSA? A TEST<br />

USING ECOMORPHOLOGY AND SEXUAL ISOLATION IN TIMEMA CRISTINAE WALKING-<br />

STICKS. • P. Nosil and B. J. Crespi. .................................................................................... 102–112.<br />

HISTORIC CYCLES OF FRAGMENTATION AND EXPANSION IN PARNASSIUS SMINTHEUS<br />

(PAPILIONIDAE) INFERRED USING MITOCHONDRIAL DNA. • Eric G. DeChaine and Andrew<br />

P. Martin. ............................................................................................................................ 113–127.<br />

FITNESS COSTS OF INSECTICI<strong>DE</strong> RESISTANCE IN NATURAL BREEDING SITES OF THE<br />

MOSQUITO CULEX PIPIENS. • Denis Bourguet, Thomas Guillemaud, Christine Chevillon, and<br />

Michel Raymond. ................................................................................................................. 128–135.<br />

INFLUENCE OF INDIVIDUAL BODY SIZE AND VARIABLE THRESHOLDS ON THE<br />

INCI<strong>DE</strong>NCE OF A SNEAKER MALE REPRODUCTIVE TACTIC IN ATLANTIC SALMON. • Nadia<br />

Aubin-Horth and Julian J. Dodson. ...................................................................................... 136–144.<br />

EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY OF THE NORTHERN LEOPARD FROG: RECONSTRUCTION OF<br />

PHYLOGENY, PHYLOGEOGRAPHY, AND HISTORICAL CHANGES IN POPULATION<br />

<strong>DE</strong>MOGRAPHY FROM MITOCHONDRIAL DNA. • Eric A. Hoffman and Michael S. Blouin. . 145–159.<br />

MICROGEOGRAPHIC COUNTERGRADIENT VARIATION IN THE WOOD FROG, RANA<br />

SYLVATICA. • David K. Skelly. ............................................................................................ 160–165.<br />

RAPID EVOLUTION OF A SEXUALLY SELECTED TRAIT FOLLOWING POPULATION<br />

ESTABLISHMENT IN A NOVEL HABITAT. • Pamela J. Yeh. ............................................... 166–174.<br />

28


THE EVOLUTION AND MAINTENANCE OF <strong>DE</strong>LAYED IMPLANTATION IN THE MUSTELIDAE<br />

(MAMMALIA: CARNIVORA). • Michael D. Thom, Dominic D. P. Johnson, and David W.<br />

Macdonald. ......................................................................................................................... 175–183.<br />

LINKAGE-<strong>DE</strong>PEN<strong>DE</strong>NT GENE FLOW IN A HOUSE MOUSE CHROMOSOMAL HYBRID ZONE.<br />

Thadsin Panithanarak, Heidi C. Hauffe, John F. Dallas, Anita Glover, Richard G. Ward, and<br />

Jeremy B. Searle. ................................................................................................................ 184–192.<br />

BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS<br />

SPECIATION AND ECOLOGY REVISITED: PHYLOGENETIC NICHE CONSERVATISM AND<br />

THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. • John J. Wiens. ...................................................................... 193–197.<br />

LIFE CYCLES SHAPE PARASITE EVOLUTION: COMPARATIVE POPULATION GENETICS OF<br />

SALMON TREMATO<strong>DE</strong>S. • Charles D. Criscione and Michael S. Blouin. ............................ 198–202.<br />

PARASITISM REDUCES THE POTENTIAL FOR EVOLUTION IN A WILD BIRD POPULATION. •<br />

Anne Charmantier, Loeske E. B. Kruuk, and Marcel M. Lambrechts. ................................... 203–206.<br />

THE SOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF EVOLUTION. • . ....................................................... 207–208.<br />

FAO<br />

AQUACULTURE NEWSLETTER<br />

<strong>DE</strong>CEMBER 2003 NO. 30<br />

Assessing markets and market conditions<br />

For aquatic products in Asia..............................................................................................................4<br />

FAO-ASEAN strategic planning workshop on<br />

Harmonization of standards for shrimp export-import<br />

Simon Funge-Smith...........................................................................................................................6<br />

AGORA- providing scientific literature to the<br />

Developing world...............................................................................................................................7<br />

FAO contributes to dialogue on Water, Food<br />

And the Environment.........................................................................................................................8<br />

Biodiversity and the ecosystem approach<br />

To aquaculture forestry and fisheries.................................................................................................9<br />

Trends in national aquaculture legislation (part 1)<br />

Melvin Spreij ...................................................................................................................................10<br />

Viet Nam applies CCRF for aquaculture development<br />

Raymon van Anrooy........................................................................................................................14<br />

Koi herpes virus (KHV): an Asian problem?<br />

Rohana Subasinghe........................................................................................................................15<br />

Responsible shrimp farming in Madagascar<br />

Cassandra de Young.......................................................................................................................17<br />

New addition to Aquaculture Group.................................................................................................18<br />

Is white shrimp (Penaeus vannamei) a threat<br />

To Asian shrimp culture?<br />

Simon Funge-Smith, Matthew Briggs and<br />

Rohana Subasinghe..........................................................................................................................9<br />

Using international mechanism for the<br />

Control, movement and responsible use<br />

Of alien species in aquatic systems<br />

Devin Bartley...................................................................................................................................24<br />

International workshop on advances in<br />

sea cucumber aquaculture and management<br />

Alessandro Lovatelli........................................................................................................................28<br />

Second session of the COFI-Committee on aquaculture<br />

Concludes successfully<br />

Rohana Subasinghe and George Kourous.......................................................................................29<br />

FAO Aquaculture project news........................................................................................................31<br />

29


New FAO publications.....................................................................................................................34<br />

FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

MARCH 2004, VOLUME 13, ISSUE 2<br />

1. Effect of temperature, age class, and growth on induction of aestivation in Japanese sandeel<br />

(Ammodytes personatus) in Ise Bay, central Japan<br />

Tomiyama M.; Yanagibashi S. ............................................................................................ 81-90(10)<br />

2. Climate change and abundance of the Atlantic-Iberian sardine (Sardina pilchardus)<br />

Guisande C.; Vergara A.R.; Riveiro I.; Cabanas J.M. ........................................................ 91-101(11)<br />

3. Impact of freshwater input and wind on landings of anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) and<br />

sardine (Sardina pilchardus) in shelf waters surrounding the Ebre (Ebro) River delta (northwestern<br />

Mediterranean)<br />

Lloret J.; Palomera I.; Salat J.; Sole I. ............................................................................... 102-110(9)<br />

4. Greenland cod (Gadus morhua): modeling recruitment variation during the second half of the<br />

20th century<br />

Stein M.; Borovkov V.A. .................................................................................................. 111-120(10)<br />

5. Late winter larval mesopelagic fish assemblage in the Kuroshio waters of the western North<br />

Pacific<br />

Sassa C.; Kawaguchi K.; Mori K. .................................................................................... 121-133(13)<br />

6. Optimum temperature and food-limited growth of larval Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) and<br />

haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) on Georges Bank<br />

Buckley L.J.; Caldarone E.M.; Lough R.G.......................................................................... 134-140(7)<br />

7. In a Perfect Ocean: the State of Fisheries and Ecosystems in the North Atlantic Ocean<br />

Frank K.T.; Choi J.S. ........................................................................................................ 141-143(3)<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL<br />

JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2004, VOLUME 21, ISSUE 1<br />

1. Characterization of a Neutrophilic, Chemolithoautotrophic Fe(II)-Oxidizing -Proteobacterium<br />

from Freshwater Wetland Sediments<br />

Sobolev D.; Roden E.E.......................................................................................................... 1-10(10)<br />

2. Molecular Phylogenetic Analysis of a Bacterial Community in an Oligotrophic Cave<br />

Environment<br />

Barton H.A.; Taylor M.R.; Pace N.R. ................................................................................... 11-20(10)<br />

3. Laboratory Investigation of the Role of Bacteria in the Weathering of Basalt Near Deep Sea<br />

Hydrothermal Vents<br />

Daughney C.J.; Rioux J-P.; Fortin D.; Pichler T.................................................................... 21-31(11)<br />

4. Sulfate Respiration in Extreme Environments: A Kinetic Study<br />

Roychoudhury A.N...............................................................................................................33-43(11)<br />

5. The Role of Autotrophic Picocyanobacteria in Calcite Precipitation in an Oligotrophic Lake<br />

Dittrich M.; Kurz P.; Wehrli B................................................................................................. 45-53(9)<br />

6. Precipitation of Carbonates by Bacteria from a Saline Soil, in Natural and Artificial Soil Extracts<br />

Párraga J.; Rivadeneyra M.A.; Martín-García J.M.; Delgado R.; Delgado G......................... 55-66(12)<br />

7. Further Readings in Geomicrobiology ............................................................................... 67-68(2)<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL<br />

MARCH 2004, VOLUME 21, ISSUE 2<br />

1. Fractionation of an Aquatic Fulvic Acid upon Adsorption to the Bacterium, Bacillus subtilis<br />

Maurice P.A.; Manecki M.; Fein J.B.; Schaefer J. ................................................................ 69-78(10)<br />

2. Competitive Formation of Hydroxycarbonate Green Rust 1 versus Hydroxysulphate Green<br />

Rust 2 in Shewanella putrefaciens Cultures<br />

30


Ona-Nguema G.; Carteret C.; Benali O.; Abdelmoula M.; Génin J-M.; Jorand F. ................. 79-90(12)<br />

3. Microbial Mat Boundaries between Chemolithotrophs and Phototrophs in Geothermal Hot<br />

Spring Effluents<br />

Kato K.; Kobayashi T.; Yamamoto H.; Nakagawa T.; Maki Y.; Hoaki T. ................................. 91-98(8)<br />

4. Characterization of Iron-Oxides Formed by Oxidation of Ferrous Ions in the Presence of<br />

Various Bacterial Species and Inorganic Ligands<br />

Châtellier X.; West M.M.; Rose J.; Fortin D.; Leppard G.G.; Ferris F.G. ............................. 99-112(14)<br />

5. Resistance to, and Accumulation of, Uranium by Bacteria from a Uranium-Contaminated Site<br />

Suzuki Y.; Banfield J.F. .................................................................................................... 113-121(9)<br />

6. Molecular Phylogenetic Analysis of Archaea and Bacteria in Wind Cave, South Dakota<br />

Chelius M.K.; Moore J.C. ................................................................................................ 123-134(12)<br />

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL<br />

APRIL-MAY 2004, VOLUME 21, ISSUE 3<br />

1. Biohydrometallurgy for Nonsulfidic Minerals--A Review<br />

Jain N.; Sharma D.K. ...................................................................................................... 135-144(10)<br />

2. Detection and Enumeration of Sulphate-Reducing Bacteria in Estuarine Sediments by<br />

Competitive PCR<br />

Kondo R.; Nedwell D.B.; Purdy K.J.; de Queiroz Silva S. ................................................ 145-157(13)<br />

3. Uranium Biosorption by the Lichen Trapelia involuta at a Uranium Mine<br />

Purvis O.W.; Bailey E.H.; McLean J.; Kasama T.; Williamson B.J. .................................... 159-167(9)<br />

4. Microbiological Comparison of Core and Groundwater Samples Collected from a Fractured<br />

Basalt Aquifer with that of Dialysis Chambers Incubated In Situ<br />

Lehman R.M.; O'Connell S.P.; Banta A.; Fredrickson J.K.; Reysenbach A-L.; Kieft T.L.; Colwell<br />

F.S. ................................................................................................................................ 169-182(14)<br />

5. Structure and Reactivity of a Biological Soil Crust from a Xeric Sandy Soil in Central Europe<br />

Hoppert M.; Reimer R.; Kemmling A.; Schröder A.; Günzl B.; Heinken T. .......................... 183-191(9)<br />

6. Pyrite Framboids as Biomarkers for Iron-Sulfur Systems<br />

Popa R.; Kinkle B.K.; Badescu A. ................................................................................... 193-206(14)<br />

7. Effect of Molybdate and Cell Growth on S-Isotope Fractionation During Bacterial Sulfate<br />

Reduction<br />

Stögbauer A.; Koydon S.; Berner Z.; Winter J.; Stüben D. ............................................... 207-219(13)<br />

8. Thermodynamic Constraints on Microbially Mediated Processes in Lakes of the McMurdo Dry<br />

Valleys, Antarctica<br />

Lee P.A.; Mikucki J.A.; Foreman C.M.; Priscu J.C.; DiTullio G.R.; Riseman S.F.; de Mora S.J.;<br />

Wolf C.F.; Kester L. ........................................................................................................ 221-237(17)<br />

9. Further Readings in Geomicrobiology ........................................................................... 239-240(2)<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY & BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />

MARCH 2004, VOLUME 13, ISSUE 2<br />

1. Scale and trends in species richness: considerations for monitoring biological diversity for<br />

political purposes<br />

Weber D.; Hintermann U.; Zangger A. ................................................................................ 97-104(8)<br />

2. Variation in litterfall-climate relationships between coniferous and broadleaf forests in Eurasia<br />

Liu C.; Westman C.J.; Berg B.; Kutsch W.; Wang G.Z.; Man R.; Ilvesniemi H. ................. 105-114(10)<br />

3. What limits the spread of fire-dependent vegetation? Evidence from geographic variation of<br />

serotiny in a New Zealand shrub<br />

Bond W.J.; Dickinson K.J.M.; Mark A.F. .......................................................................... 115-127(13)<br />

4. Changes in rain forest butterfly diversity following major ENSO-induced fires in Borneo<br />

Cleary D.F.R.; Genner M.J. ............................................................................................ 129-140(12)<br />

5. An evaluation of the Lost World and Vertical Displacement hypotheses in the Chimantá Massif,<br />

Venezuelan Guayana<br />

31


Rull V. .............................................................................................................................. 141-148(8)<br />

6. The implications of Tertiary and Quaternary sea level rise events for avian distribution patterns<br />

in the lowlands of northern South America<br />

Nores M. ........................................................................................................................ 149-161(13)<br />

7. Body size structure in north-western Mediterranean Plio-Pleistocene mammalian faunas<br />

Rodríguez J.; Alberdi M.T.; Azanza B.; Prado J.L. .......................................................... 163-176(14)<br />

8. Terrestrial bird community patterns on the coralline islands of the Dahlak Archipelago, Red<br />

Sea, Eritrea<br />

Azeria E.T. ..................................................................................................................... 177-187(11)<br />

9. CORRIGENDUM .......................................................................................................... 189-189(1)<br />

10. An American legend ................................................................................................... 191-191(1)<br />

11. An historic journey into the terrestrial carbon cycle ...................................................... 192-192(1)<br />

JOURNAL OF AQUATIC ANIMAL HEALTH<br />

VOLUME 15, NUMBER 3, SEPTEMBER 2003<br />

189 Molecular and Phenotypic Characterization of Strains of Photobacterium damselae subsp.<br />

piscicida Isolated from Hybrid Striped Bass Cultured in Louisiana, USA<br />

John P. Hawke, Ronald L. Thune, Richard K. Cooper, Erika Judice and Maria Kelly-Smith<br />

202 Effects of Sublethal Dissolved Oxygen Stress on Blood Glucose and Susceptibility to<br />

Streptococcus agalactiae in Nile Tilapia Oreochromis niloticus<br />

Joyce J. Evans, Craig A. Shoemaker and Phillip H. Klesius<br />

209 Laboratory Efficacy of Amoxicillin for the Control of Streptococcus iniae Infection in Sunshine<br />

Bass<br />

Ahmed M. Darwish and Adnan A. Ismaiel<br />

215 Effects of Temperature on the Susceptibility of Largemouth Bass to Largemouth Bass Virus<br />

Emily C. Grant, David P. Philipp, Kate R. Inendino and Tony L. Goldberg<br />

221 Inhibitory Effects of Some Antibiotics on Activity of Carbonic Anhydrase from Rainbow Trout<br />

Erythrocytes in Vitro and in Vivo<br />

Olcay Hisar, ükriye Aras Hisar, Ö. rfan Küfreviolu and Telat Yanik<br />

229 Response of Channel Catfish to Diets Containing T-2 Toxin<br />

Bruce B. Manning, Menghe H. Li, Edwin H. Robinson, Patricia S. Gaunt, Alvin C. Camus and<br />

George E. Rottinghaus<br />

239 Preliminary Assessment of the Tolerance and Efficacy of Florfenicol against Edwardsiella<br />

ictaluri Administered in Feed to Channel Catfish<br />

P. Gaunt, R. Endris, L. Khoo, A. T. Leard, S. Jack, T. Santucci, T. Katz, S. V. Radecki and R.<br />

Simmons<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />

FEBRUARY 2004, VOLUME 31, ISSUE 2<br />

1. The mismeasure of islands: implications for biogeographical theory and the conservation of<br />

nature<br />

Walter H.S. ..................................................................................................................... 177-197(21)<br />

2. A fine-resolution Pliocene pollen and charcoal record from Yallalie, south-western Australia<br />

Atahan P.; Dodson J.R.; Itzstein-Davey F. ........................................................................ 199-205(7)<br />

3. Landscape analysis of Aboriginal fire management in Central Arnhem Land, north Australia<br />

Bowman D.M.J.S.; Walsh A.; Prior L.D. .......................................................................... 207-223(17)<br />

4. Fire regimes in north-eastern Cambodian monsoonal forests, with a 9300-year sediment<br />

charcoal record<br />

Maxwell A.L. ................................................................................................................... 225-239(15)<br />

5. Time of germination and establishment success after fire of three obligate seeders in a<br />

Mediterranean shrubland of central Spain<br />

Quintana J.R.; Cruz A.; Fernández-González F.; Moreno J.M. .......................................... 241-249(9)<br />

32


6. A modern pollen–climate calibration set from northern Europe: developing and testing a tool for<br />

palaeoclimatological reconstructions<br />

Seppä H.; Birks H.J.B.; Odland A.; Poska A.; Veski S. .................................................... 251-267(17)<br />

7. Pharaonic Egypt and the origins of plague<br />

Panagiotakopulu E. .......................................................................................................... 269-275(7)<br />

8. Mistakes in the analysis of exotic species establishment: source pool designation and<br />

correlates of introduction success among parrots (Aves: Psittaciformes) of the world<br />

Cassey P.; Blackburn T.M.; Jones K.E.; Lockwood J.L. 277-284(8)<br />

9. The influence of spatial resolution on macroecological patterns of range size variation: a case<br />

study using parrots (Aves: Psittaciformes) of the world<br />

Blackburn T.M.; Jones K.E.; Cassey P.; Losin N. .............................................................. 285-293(9)<br />

10. Predicting the distribution of four species of raptors (Aves: Accipitridae) in southern Spain:<br />

statistical models work better than existing maps<br />

Bustamante J.; Seoane J. ............................................................................................... 295-306(12)<br />

11. Breeding bird species richness in Taiwan: distribution on gradients of elevation, primary<br />

productivity and urbanization<br />

Lee P-F.; Ding T-S.; Hsu F-H.; Geng S. ............................................................................ 307-314(8)<br />

12. Climate and satellite-derived land cover for predicting breeding bird distribution in the Great<br />

Lakes Basin<br />

Venier L.A.; Pearce J.; McKee J.E.; McKenney D.W.; Niemi G.J. .................................... 315-331(17)<br />

13. Validating the use of woodrat (Neotoma) middens for documenting natural invasions<br />

Lyford M.E.; Jackson S.T.; Gray S.T.; Eddy R.G. 333-342(10)<br />

14. Raising the standard for S-Plus: Crawley, M.J. (2002) Statistical computing: an introduction to<br />

data analysis using S-Plus. John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Chichester, UK. ix + 761, figs, tables, index.<br />

Hardback: price £55.00, ISBN 0-471-56040-5.<br />

Dytham C. ........................................................................................................................ 343-343(1)<br />

15. The challenge of historical ecology: Bowman D.M.J.S., Farrer, S.L. (eds) (2002). Measuring<br />

and imagining: exploring centuries of Australian landscape change. Australian Journal of Botany<br />

vol. 50 no. 4. The Special 50th Anniversary Issue. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Australia.<br />

Twelve articles, iii + 170, figs, tables, line diagrams, photographs. Paperback: price AUS$75.00,<br />

ISSN 0067 1924.<br />

Clarke P.J. ....................................................................................................................... 344-344(1)<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />

MARCH 2004, VOLUME 31, ISSUE 3<br />

1. What biogeography is: a place for process<br />

McDowall R.M. ................................................................................................................. 345-351(7)<br />

2. Do we need land-cover data to model species distributions in Europe?<br />

Thuiller W.; Araújo M.B.; Lavorel S. .................................................................................. 353-361(9)<br />

3. Using standardized sampling designs from population ecology to assess biodiversity patterns<br />

of therophyte vegetation across scales<br />

Kluth C.; Bruelheide H. ................................................................................................... 363-377(15)<br />

4. Geographical gradients in seed mass in relation to climate<br />

Murray B.R.; Brown A.H.D.; Dickman C.R.; Crowther M.S. ............................................. 379-388(10)<br />

5. Fern species richness along a central Himalayan elevational gradient, Nepal<br />

Bhattarai K.R.; Vetaas O.R.; Grytnes J.A. ....................................................................... 389-400(12)<br />

6. Recent spread of Dracophyllum scrub on subantarctic Campbell Island, New Zealand: climatic<br />

or anthropogenic origins?<br />

Wilmshurst J.M.; Bestic K.L.; Meurk C.D.; McGlone M.S. ................................................ 401-413(13)<br />

7. Soil characteristics of Rocky Mountain National Park grasslands invaded by Melilotus officinalis<br />

and M. alba<br />

Wolf J.J.; Beatty S.W.; Seastedt T.R. .............................................................................. 415-424(10)<br />

8. Comparative phylogeography of Amphicarpaea legumes and their root-nodule symbionts in<br />

Japan and North America<br />

33


Parker M.A.; Doyle J.L.; Doyle J.J. ................................................................................. 425-434(10)<br />

9. Differing influences of natural and artificial disturbances on riparian cottonwoods from prairie to<br />

mountain ecoregions in Alberta, Canada<br />

Samuelson G.M.; Rood S.B. ........................................................................................... 435-450(16)<br />

10. The combined role of glaciation and hybridization in shaping the distribution of genetic<br />

variation in a Patagonian southern beech<br />

Marchelli P.; Gallo L.A. ................................................................................................... 451-460(10)<br />

11. Bioclimatic perspectives in the distribution of Quercus ithaburensis Decne. subspecies in<br />

Turkey and in the Levant<br />

Dufour-Dror J-M.; Ertas A. .............................................................................................. 461-474(14)<br />

12. Biogeography and conservation of the genus Ficus (Moraceae) in Mexico<br />

Serrato A.; Ibarra-Manríquez G.; Oyama K. .................................................................... 475-485(11)<br />

13. Floristic biogeography of the Hawaiian Islands: influences of area, environment and<br />

paleogeography<br />

Price J.P. ....................................................................................................................... 487-500(14)<br />

14. Phytogeography of the Kaieteur Falls, Potaro Plateau, Guyana: floral distributions and<br />

affinities<br />

Kelloff C.L.; Funk V.A. .................................................................................................... 501-513(13)<br />

15. Population viability analysis: Beissinger, S.R. and McCullough, D.R. (eds) (2002) Population<br />

viability analysis. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA. xvi + 577, figs, tables, line<br />

diagrams, index. Hardback: price $95.00, ISBN 0-226-04177-8. Paperback: price $35.00, ISBN 0-<br />

226-04178-6.<br />

Fieberg J........................................................................................................................... 515-516(2)<br />

16. The ecologist's very own ecotone: exploring the lab–field border: Kohler, R.E. (2002)<br />

Landscapes and labscapes: exploring the lab–field border in biology. The University of Chicago<br />

Press, Chicago, IL, USA. xv + 326, figs, line diagrams, halftones, index. Hardback: price $58.00,<br />

ISBN 0-226-45009-0. Paperback: price $22.00, ISBN: 0-226-45010-4.<br />

Pilkington M...................................................................................................................... 516-516(1)<br />

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY<br />

MARCH-APRIL 2004, VOLUME 33, ISSUE 2<br />

EXECUTIVE SUMMARIES:<br />

This Issue in Journal of Environmental Quality.......................................................................413-418.<br />

REVIEWS AND ANALYSES:<br />

Ralf Schulz<br />

Field Studies on Exposure, Effects, and Risk Mitigation of Aquatic Nonpoint-Source Insecticide<br />

Pollution: A Review.............................................................................................................. 419-448.<br />

TECHNICAL REPORTS:<br />

Atmospheric Pollutants and Trace Gases:<br />

Lowry A. Harper, Ron R. Sharpe, and John D. Simmons<br />

Ammonia Emissions from Swine Houses in the Southeastern United States......................... 449-457.<br />

Ecological Risk Assessment:<br />

R. G. Darmody, J. C. Marlin, J. Talbott, R. A. Green, E. F. Brewer, and C. Stohr<br />

Dredged Illinois River Sediments: Plant Growth and Metal Uptake.........................................458-464.<br />

Ecosystem Restoration:<br />

J. A. Fleck, D. A. Bossio, and R. Fujii<br />

Dissolved Organic Carbon and Disinfection By-Product Precursor Release from Managed Peat<br />

Soils......................................................................................................................................465-475.<br />

Ground Water Quality:<br />

S. J. Rodvang, D. M. Mikalson, and M. C. Ryan<br />

Changes in Ground Water Quality in an Irrigated Area of Southern Alberta............................476-487.<br />

H. M. Selim, G. R. Gobran, X. Guan, and N. Clarke<br />

Mobility of Sulfate in Forest Soils: Kinetic Modeling................................................................488-495.<br />

Heavy Metals in the Environment:<br />

34


Karin Weggler, Michael J. McLaughlin, and Robin D. Graham<br />

Effect of Chloride in Soil Solution on the Plant Availability of Biosolid-Borne Cadmium...........496-504.<br />

Andreas Tom-Petersen, Hans Christian Bruun Hansen, and Ole Nybroe<br />

Time and Moisture Effects on Total and Bioavailable Copper in Soil Water Extracts...............505-512.<br />

J. L. Schroder, N. T. Basta, S. W. Casteel, T. J. Evans, M. E. Payton, and J. Si<br />

Validation of the In Vitro Gastrointestinal (IVG) Method to Estimate Relative Bioavailable Lead in<br />

Contaminated Soils...............................................................................................................513-521.<br />

Sally Brown, Rufus Chaney, Judith Hallfrisch, James A. Ryan, and William R. Berti<br />

In Situ Soil Treatments to Reduce the Phyto- and Bioavailability of Lead, Zinc, and Cadmium522-531.<br />

M. L. Adams, F. J. Zhao, S. P. McGrath, F. A. Nicholson, and B. J. Chambers<br />

Predicting Cadmium Concentrations in Wheat and Barley Grain Using Soil Properties...........532-541.<br />

Valtcho D. Zheljazkov and Philip R. Warman<br />

Source-Separated Municipal Solid Waste Compost Application to Swiss Chard and Basil......542-552.<br />

Monday O. Mbila and Michael L. Thompson<br />

Plant-Available Zinc and Lead in Mine Spoils and Soils at the Mines of Spain, Iowa ..............553-558.<br />

Yiqiang Zhang, Zahir A. Zahir, and William T. Frankenberger, Jr.<br />

Fate of Colloidal-Particulate Elemental Selenium in Aquatic Systems....................................559-564.<br />

Landscape and Watershed Processes:<br />

Deanna L. Osmond and David H. Hardy<br />

Characterization of Turf Practices in Five North Carolina Communities..................................565-575.<br />

Mellisa A. Pensa and Randolph M. Chambers<br />

Trophic Transition in a Lake on the Virginia Coastal Plain......................................................576-580.<br />

Organic Compounds in the Environment:<br />

M. Cade Smith, David R. Shaw, Joseph H. Massey, Michele Boyette, and William Kingery<br />

Incubation Time Effects on Imazaquin Desorption as Determined by Nonequilibrium Thin-Soil<br />

Disc Flow..............................................................................................................................581-593.<br />

Laura L. McConnell, Jennifer A. Harman-Fetcho, and James D. Hagy, III<br />

Measured Concentrations of Herbicides and Model Predictions of Atrazine Fate in the Patuxent<br />

River Estuary........................................................................................................................594-604.<br />

Laura Scrano, Sabino A. Bufo, Tommaso R. I. Cataldi, and Triantafyllos A. Albanis<br />

Surface Retention and Photochemical Reactivity of the Diphenylether Herbicide Oxyfluorfen.605-611.<br />

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

Effects of Environmental Factors on 1,3-Dichloropropene Hydrolysis in Water and Soil .........612-618.<br />

Trine Henriksen, Bo Svensmark, and René K. Juhler<br />

Degradation and Sorption of Metribuzin and Primary Metabolites in a Sandy Soil..................619-627.<br />

Plant and Environment Interactions:<br />

A. Chabbi and C. Rumpel<br />

Chemical Composition of Organic Matter in Extremely Acid, Lignite-Containing Lake Sediments<br />

Impacted by Fly Ash Contamination ......................................................................................628-636.<br />

M. L. Decau, J. C. Simon, and A. Jacquet<br />

Nitrate Leaching under Grassland as Affected by Mineral Nitrogen Fertilization and Cattle<br />

Urine.....................................................................................................................................637-644.<br />

Surface Water Quality:<br />

Zachary M. Easton and A. Martin Petrovic<br />

Fertilizer Source Effect on Ground and Surface Water Quality in Drainage from Turfgrass.....645-655.<br />

J. Demchak, J. Skousen, and L. M. McDonald<br />

Longevity of Acid Discharges from Underground Mines Located above the Regional Water<br />

Table.....................................................................................................................................656-668.<br />

D. B. Jaynes, D. L. Dinnes, D. W. Meek, D. L. Karlen, C. A. Cambardella, and T. S. Colvin<br />

Using the Late Spring Nitrate Test to Reduce Nitrate Loss within a Watershed......................669-677.<br />

Faruk Djodjic, Katarina Börling, and Lars Bergström<br />

Phosphorus Leaching in Relation to Soil Type and Soil Phosphorus Content.........................678-684.<br />

Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport:<br />

D. Wang, J. M. He, and J. A. Knuteson<br />

Concentration–Time Exposure Index for Modeling Soil Fumigation under Various Management<br />

Scenarios..............................................................................................................................685-694.<br />

35


Waste Management:<br />

Nathalie Vaillant, Fabien Monnet, Huguette Sallanon, Alain Coudret, and Adnane Hitmi<br />

Use of Commercial Plant Species in a Hydroponic System to Treat Domestic Wastewaters...695-702.<br />

G. A. O'Connor, D. Sarkar, S. R. Brinton, H. A. Elliott, and F. G. Martin<br />

Phytoavailability of Biosolids Phosphorus..............................................................................703-712.<br />

M. G. Healy, M. Rodgers, and J. Mulqueen<br />

Recirculating Sand Filters for Treatment of Synthetic Dairy Parlor Washings.........................713-718.<br />

G. R. Muñoz, K. A. Kelling, J. M. Powell, and P. E. Speth<br />

Comparison of Estimates of First-Year Dairy Manure Nitrogen Availability or Recovery Using<br />

Nitrogen-15 and Other Techniques........................................................................................719-727.<br />

P. B. DeLaune, P. A. Moore, Jr., T. C. Daniel, and J. L. Lemunyon<br />

Effect of Chemical and Microbial Amendments on Ammonia Volatilization from Composting<br />

Poultry Litter..........................................................................................................................728-734.<br />

A. F. Johnson, D. M. Vietor, F. M. Rouquette, Jr., and V. A. Haby<br />

Fate of Phosphorus in Dairy Wastewater and Poultry Litter Applied on Grassland..................735-739.<br />

M. J. Schlossberg, C. P. Vanags, and W. P. Miller<br />

Bermudagrass Sod Growth and Metal Uptake in Coal Combustion By-Product-Amended<br />

Media....................................................................................................................................740-748.<br />

P. A. Vadas, P. J. A. Kleinman, and A. N. Sharpley<br />

A Simple Method to Predict Dissolved Phosphorus in Runoff from Surface-Applied Manures.749-756.<br />

Benjamin L. Turner<br />

Optimizing Phosphorus Characterization in Animal Manures by Solution Phosphorus-31 Nuclear<br />

Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy.......................................................................................757-766.<br />

C. M. Preston and P. D. Forrester<br />

Chemical and Carbon-13 Cross-Polarization Magic-Angle Spinning Nuclear Magnetic Resonance<br />

Characterization of Logyard Fines from British Columbia.......................................................767-777.<br />

A. J. Franzluebbers, S. R. Wilkinson, and J. A. Stuedemann<br />

Bermudagrass Management in the Southern Piedmont, USA: IX. Trace Elements in Soil with<br />

Broiler Litter Application.........................................................................................................778-784.<br />

Wetlands and Aquatic Processes:<br />

Gregory L. Bruland and Curtis J. Richardson<br />

A Spatially Explicit Investigation of Phosphorus Sorption and Related Soil Properties in Two<br />

Riparian Wetlands.................................................................................................................785-794.<br />

BOOK REVIEWS:<br />

Axel Höhn<br />

Geochemical and Hydrological Reactivity of Heavy Metals in Soils......................................... 33: 795.<br />

Junda Lin<br />

Sustainable Aquaculture: Global Perspectives..............................................................................796.<br />

J. Samuel Walker<br />

Hanford Site Historic District: History of the Plutonium Production Facilities, 1943–1990...............796.<br />

A.S. Rogowski<br />

Environmental Impact Assessment: Practical Solutions to Recurrent Problems.............................797.<br />

ERRATA:<br />

Kuldip Kumar, Anita Thompson, Ashok K. Singh, Yogesh Chander, and Satish C. Gupta<br />

Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay for Ultratrace Determination of Antibiotics in Aqueous<br />

Samples.......................................................................................................................................797.<br />

JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH<br />

VOLUME 61 NUMBER 6<br />

ISSUE NOV 2003<br />

Articles<br />

Separation of quasi-semiannual Rossby waves from the eastern boundary of the India<br />

Ocean..................................................................................................................................707 - 723<br />

36


Florence Birol; Rosemary Morrow<br />

Stability of the global ocean circulation: The connection of equilibria within a hierarchy of<br />

models.................................................................................................................................725 - 743<br />

Henk A. Dijkstra; Wilbert Weijer<br />

Does the nonlinearity of the equation of state impose an upper bound on the buoyancy<br />

frequency?.......................................................................................................................... 745 - 764<br />

Trevor J. McDougall; John A. Church; David R. Jackett<br />

Simultaneous data-based optimization of a 1D-ecosystem model at three locations in the North<br />

Atlantic: Part I - Method and parameter estimates.................................................................765 - 793<br />

Markus Schartau; Andreas Oschlies<br />

Simultaneous data-based optimization of a 1D-ecosystem model at three locations in the North<br />

Atlantic: Part II - Standing stocks and nitrogen fluxes............................................................794 - 820<br />

Markus Schartau; Andreas Oschlies<br />

A model of fluff layer erosion and subsequent bed erosion in the presence of the bioturbator,<br />

Hydrobia ulvae.....................................................................................................................821 – 849<br />

Francis Orvain; Pierre Le Hir; Pierre-Guy Sauriau<br />

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

VOLUME 34 NUMBER 3 MARCH 2004<br />

ARTICLES<br />

Optimal Observations for Variational Data Assimilation. Armin Köhl and Detlef Stammer, .... 529–542.<br />

Direct Observations of Along-Isopycnal Upwelling and Diapycnal Velocity at a Shelfbreak Front*.<br />

John A. Barth, Dave Hebert, Andrew C. Dale, and David S. Ullman, .................................... 543–565.<br />

Deep-Water Flow in the Mariana and Caroline Basins*. Gerold Siedler, Jürgen Holfort, Walter<br />

Zenk, Thomas J. Müller, and Tiberiu Csernok, ..................................................................... 566–581.<br />

The Origin, Pathway, and Destination of Niño-3 Water Estimated by a Simulated Passive Tracer<br />

and Its Adjoint. Ichiro Fukumori, Tong Lee, Benny Cheng, and Dimitris Menemenlis, ........... 582–604.<br />

Vorticity Balance in Coarse-Resolution Global Ocean Simulations. Youyu Lu and Detlef Stammer,<br />

............................................................................................................................................ 605–622.<br />

SST Assimilation Experiments in a Tropical Pacific Ocean Model. Youmin Tang, Richard<br />

Kleeman, and Andrew M. Moore, ......................................................................................... 623–642.<br />

The Relationship between Sea Surface Temperature and Thermocline Depth in the Eastern<br />

Equatorial Pacific. Hein Zelle, Gerrian Appeldoorn, Gerrit Burgers, and Geert Jan van<br />

Oldenborgh, ........................................................................................................................ 643–655.<br />

A Laboratory Model of Thermocline Depth and Exchange Fluxes across Circumpolar Fronts*.<br />

Claudia Cenedese, John Marshall, and J. A. Whitehead, ..................................................... 656–667.<br />

Aspects of the Mean Wintertime Circulation along Australia's Southern Shelves: Numerical<br />

Studies. Mauro Cirano and John F. Middleton, ..................................................................... 668–684.<br />

NOTES AND CORRESPON<strong>DE</strong>NCE<br />

The Meandering Path of a Drifter around the Western Alboran Gyre. Jesús García Lafuente and<br />

Javier Delgado, ................................................................................................................... 685–692.<br />

Wave Breaking and Ocean Surface Layer Thermal Response. George Mellor and Alan Blumberg,<br />

............................................................................................................................................ 693–698.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH<br />

VOLUME 26, NUMBER 3: MARCH 2004<br />

EDITORIALS:<br />

Kevin Flynn, Roger Harris, Ian Jenkinson, and John Lehman<br />

‘Horizons’............................................................................................................................... 26: 257<br />

HORIZONS:<br />

Xabier Irigoien<br />

Some ideas about the role of lipids in the life cycle of Calanus finmarchicus<br />

37


PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004....................................................259-263<br />

ORIGINAL ARTICLES:<br />

R. D. M. Nash and A. J. Geffen<br />

Seasonal and interannual variation in abundance of Calanus finmarchicus (Gunnerus) and<br />

Calanus helgolandicus (Claus) in inshore waters (west coast of the Isle of Man) in the central Irish<br />

Sea<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004....................................................265-273<br />

Valerie Andersen, Corinne Devey, Alexandra Gubanova, Marc Picheral, Victor Melnikov, Sergey<br />

Tsarin, and Louis Prieur<br />

Vertical distributions of zooplankton across the Almeria–Oran frontal zone (Mediterranean Sea)<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 275-293<br />

Paulinus Chigbu<br />

Assessment of the potential impact of the mysid shrimp, Neomysis mercedis, on Daphnia<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 295-306<br />

Iñaki Urrutxurtu<br />

Seasonal succession of tintinnids in the Nervión River estuary, Basque Country, Spain<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 307-314<br />

Matilde S. Chauton, Gavin H. Tilstone, Catherine Legrand, and Geir Johnsen<br />

Changes in pigmentation, bio-optical characteristics and photophysiology, during phytoflagellate<br />

succession in mesocosms<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 6, 2004..................................................... 315-324<br />

Erla Björk Örnólfsdóttir, S. Elizabeth Lumsden, and James L. Pinckney<br />

Phytoplankton community growth-rate response to nutrient pulses in a shallow turbid estuary,<br />

Galveston Bay, Texas<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 6, 2004..................................................... 325-339<br />

M. Camino Ordás, Santiago Fraga, José M. Franco, Amando Ordás, and Antonio Figueras<br />

Toxin and molecular analysis of Gymnodinium catenatum (Dinophyceae) strains from Galicia<br />

(NW Spain) and Andalucía (S Spain)<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 341-349<br />

Lidia Yebra and Santiago Hernández-León<br />

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases activity as a growth index in zooplankton<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 6, 2004..................................................... 351-356<br />

Klaus Gocke and Jürgen Lenz<br />

A new ‘turbulence incubator’ for measuring primary production in non-stratified waters<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 357-369<br />

Michael C. Murrell and Emile M. Lores<br />

Phytoplankton and zooplankton seasonal dynamics in a subtropical estuary: importance of<br />

cyanobacteria<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004....................................................371-382<br />

BOOK REVIEWS:<br />

Andrew Packard<br />

The Brains and Lives of Cephalopods. Nixon M. and Young J. Z. (2003) Oxford University Press,<br />

Oxford, UK. £75.00. ISBN 0-19-852761-6.............................................................................. 383-385<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH<br />

VOLUME 26, NUMBER 4: APRIL 2004<br />

ORIGINAL ARTICLES:<br />

Emmanuel Coutures and John D. Booth<br />

Note on the first phyllosoma stages of Palinurellus wieneckii (de Man, 1881) and Puerulus aff.<br />

angulatus (Bate, 1888) (Crustacea, Decapoda, Synaxidae and Palinuridae) from New Caledonia<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004....................................................387-391<br />

C. Gardner, G. B. Maguire, and H. Williams<br />

Effects of water temperature and thermoclines on larval behaviour and development in the giant<br />

crab Pseudocarcinus gigas (Lamarck)<br />

38


PLANKT Advance Access published on February 6, 2004..................................................... 393-402<br />

Iñaki Huskin, Leticia Viesca, and Ricardo Anadón<br />

Particle flux in the Subtropical Atlantic near the Azores: influence of mesozooplankton<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 403-415<br />

L. J. Sullivan and D. J. Gifford<br />

Diet of the larval ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi A. Agassiz (Ctenophora, Lobata)<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 417-431<br />

Maria Ragni and Maurizio Ribera D’Alcalà<br />

Light as an information carrier underwater<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 433-443<br />

Konstantinos Koukaras and Georgios Nikolaidis<br />

Dinophysis blooms in Greek coastal waters (Thermaikos Gulf, NW Aegean Sea)<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 445-457<br />

Mirna Batistic, Frano Krsinic, Nenad Jasprica, Marina Caric, Damir Vilicic, and Davor Lucic<br />

Gelatinous invertebrate zooplankton of the South Adriatic: species composition and vertical<br />

distribution<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 459-474<br />

Ricardo Giesecke and Humberto E. González<br />

Feeding of Sagitta enflata and vertical distribution of chaetognaths in relation to low oxygen<br />

concentrations<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 475-486<br />

Zohar Pasternak, Bernd Blasius, and Avigdor Abelson<br />

Host location by larvae of a parasitic barnacle: larval chemotaxis and plume tracking in flow<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 16, 2004................................................... 487-493<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS:<br />

Frank Sommer and Ulrich Sommer<br />

15N signatures of marine mesozooplankton and seston size fractions in Kiel Fjord, Baltic Sea<br />

PLANKT Advance Access published on February 26, 2004................................................... 495-500<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH<br />

VOLUME 51, ISSUE 1, 1-76 (FEBRUARY 2004)<br />

1. Editorial • EDITORIAL<br />

..................................................................................................................................................... 1-2<br />

C. J. M. Philippart, J. J. Beukema, G. C. Cadée and H. G. Epping<br />

2. The influence of solar ultraviolet radiation on the photochemical production of H2O2 in the<br />

equatorial Atlantic Ocean • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................... 3-10<br />

L. J. A. Gerringa, M. J. A. Rijkenberg, R. Timmermans and A. G. J. Buma<br />

3. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reduction potential in Mediterranean seagrass (Posidonia<br />

oceanica) sediments • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 11-20<br />

Nancy I. López and Carlos M. Duarte<br />

4. The influence of changes in nitrogen: silicon ratios on diatom growth dynamics • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 21-35<br />

L. C. Gilpin, K. Davidson and E. Roberts<br />

5. Microzooplankton grazing in Phaeocystis and diatom-dominated waters in the southern North<br />

Sea in spring • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 37-51<br />

C. E. Stelfox-Widdicombe, S. D. Archer, P. H. Burkill and J. Stefels<br />

6. The role of ecological divergence in speciation between intertidal and subtidal Scoloplos<br />

armiger (Polychaeta, Orbiniidae) • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 53-62<br />

Inken Kruse, Matthias Strasser and Frank Thiermann<br />

39


7. Differences in spatial structures between juveniles and adults of the gastropod Hydrobia ulvae<br />

on an intertidal mudflat (Marennes–Oléron Bay, France) potentially affect estimates of local<br />

demographic processes • SHORT COMMUNICATION<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 63-68<br />

A. -G. Haubois, J. -M. Guarini, P. Richard, A. Hemon, E. Arotcharen and G. F. Blanchard<br />

8. Predator and scavenger aggregation to discarded by-catch from dredge fisheries: importance<br />

of damage level • SHORT COMMUNICATION<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 69-76<br />

S. R. Jenkins, C. Mullen and A. R. Brand<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH<br />

VOLUME 51, ISSUE 2, 77-166 (MARCH 2004)<br />

1. Current spectra under varying stratification conditions in the central North Sea • ARTICLE<br />

................................................................................................................................................. 77-91<br />

Hans van Haren<br />

2. Rapid wave-driven advective pore water exchange in a permeable coastal sediment •<br />

ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................... 93-107<br />

Elimar Precht and Markus Huettel<br />

3. Reconstruction of the total N and P inputs from the IJsselmeer into the western Wadden Sea<br />

between 1935–1998 • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 109-131<br />

Wim van Raaphorst and Victor N. de Jonge<br />

4. Selectivity of subtidal benthic invertebrate communities for local microalgal production in an<br />

estuarine mangrove ecosystem during the post-monsoon period • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 133-144<br />

S. Bouillon , N. Koedam , W. Baeyens , B. Satyanarayana and F. Dehairs<br />

5. Dominance of blue mussels versus consumer-mediated enhancement of benthic diversity •<br />

ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 145-155<br />

Peter Enderlein and Martin Wahl<br />

6. Reproduction of the shorthorn sculpin Myoxocephalus scorpius in northern Norway • ARTICLE<br />

............................................................................................................................................. 157-166<br />

J. A. Luksenburg , T. Pedersen and I. B. Falk-Petersen<br />

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

VOL. 49(2), MARCH 2004<br />

Articles<br />

Chung, Sook-Nye, Geun-Ha Park, Kitack Lee, Robert M. Key, Frank J. Millero, Richard A. Feely,<br />

Christopher L. Sabine, and Paul G. Falkowski<br />

Postindustrial enhancement of aragonite undersaturation in the upper tropical and subtropical<br />

Atlantic Ocean: The role of fossil fuel CO2 .............................................................................315-321<br />

Milligan, Allen J., Diana E. Varela, Mark A. Brzezinski, and François M. M. Morel<br />

Dynamics of silicon metabolism and silicon isotopic discrimination in a marine diatom as a<br />

function of pCO2 ...................................................................................................................322-329<br />

Baehr, Matthew M., and Michael D. DeGrandpre<br />

In situ pCO2 and O2 measurements in a lake during turnover and stratification: Observations and<br />

modeling ...............................................................................................................................330-340<br />

Wang, Zhaohui Aleck, and Wei-Jun Cai<br />

Carbon dioxide degassing and inorganic carbon export from a marsh-dominated estuary (the<br />

Duplin River): A marsh CO2 pump .........................................................................................341-354<br />

Chadwick, D. B., A. Zirino, I. Rivera-Duarte, C. N. Katz, and A. C. Blake<br />

40


Modeling the mass balance and fate of copper in San Diego Bay ..........................................355-366<br />

Bloom, Nicolas S., Ligia M. Moretto, and Paolo Ugo<br />

A comparison of the speciation and fate of mercury in two contaminated coastal marine<br />

ecosystems: The Venice Lagoon (Italy) and Lavaca Bay (Texas) ...........................................367-375<br />

Charette, Matthew A., and Ken O. Buesseler<br />

Submarine groundwater discharge of nutrients and copper to an urban subestuary of<br />

Chesapeake Bay (Elizabeth River) ........................................................................................376-385<br />

Lundquist, Carolyn J., Simon F. Thrush, John W. Oldman, and Alastair K. Senior<br />

Limited transport and recolonization potential in shallow tidal estuaries ..................................386-395<br />

Green, Mark A., Jeanne D. Gulnick, Nathaniel Dowse, and Patience Chapman<br />

Spatiotemporal patterns of carbon remineralization and bio-irrigation in sediments of Casco Bay<br />

Estuary, Gulf of Maine ...........................................................................................................396-407<br />

Rossi, F., P. M. J. Herman, and J. J. Middelburg<br />

Interspecific and intraspecific variation of d13C and d15N in deposit- and suspension-feeding<br />

bivalves (Macoma balthica and Cerastoderma edule): Evidence of ontogenetic changes in<br />

feeding mode of Macoma balthica .........................................................................................408-414<br />

Lehmann, Moritz F., Stefano M. Bernasconi, Judith A. McKenzie, Alberto Barbieri, Marco Simona,<br />

and Mauro Veronesi<br />

Seasonal variation of the d13C and d15N of particulate and dissolved carbon and nitrogen in<br />

Lake Lugano: Constraints on biogeochemical cycling in a eutrophic lake ...............................415-429<br />

Kicklighter, C. E., J. Kubanek, and M. E. Hay<br />

Do brominated natural products defend marine worms from consumers? Some do, most<br />

don’t ......................................................................................................................................430-441<br />

Shick, J. Malcolm<br />

The continuity and intensity of ultraviolet irradiation affect the kinetics of biosynthesis,<br />

accumulation, and conversion of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) in the coral Stylophora<br />

pistillata .................................................................................................................................442-458<br />

Mei, M. L., and R. Danovaro<br />

Virus production and life strategies in aquatic sediments .......................................................459-470<br />

Hama, Takeo, Katsumi Yanagi, and Junko Hama<br />

Decrease in molecular weight of photosynthetic products of marine phytoplankton during early<br />

diagenesis .............................................................................................................................471-481<br />

Raikow, David F., Orlando Sarnelle, Alan E. Wilson, and Stephen K. Hamilton<br />

Dominance of the noxious cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa in low-nutrient lakes is<br />

associated with exotic zebra mussels ....................................................................................482-487<br />

Hassett, R. Patrick<br />

Supplementation of a diatom diet with cholesterol can enhance copepod egg-production<br />

rates ......................................................................................................................................488-494<br />

Sterner, Robert W., Tanya M. Smutka, R. Michael L. McKay, Qin Xiaoming, Erik T. Brown, and<br />

Robert M. Sherrell<br />

Phosphorus and trace metal limitation of algae and bacteria in Lake Superior ........................495-507<br />

Letelier, Ricardo M., David M. Karl, Mark R. Abbott, and Robert R. Bidigare<br />

Light driven seasonal patterns of chlorophyll and nitrate in the lower euphotic zone of the North<br />

Pacific Subtropical Gyre ........................................................................................................508-519<br />

Gervasio, Vivianaluxa, David J. Berg, Brian K. Lang, Nathan L. Allan, and Sheldon I. Guttman<br />

Genetic diversity in the Gammarus pecos species complex: Implications for conservation and<br />

regional biogeography in the Chihuahuan Desert ...................................................................520-531<br />

Schwenk, Klaus, Paavo Junttila, Milla Rautio, Finn Bastiansen, Jürgen Knapp, Outi Dove, Raquel<br />

Billiones, and Bruno Streit<br />

Ecological, morphological, and genetic differentiation of Daphnia (Hyalodaphnia) from the Finnish<br />

and Russian subarctic ...........................................................................................................532-539<br />

Kaiser, Edith, and Barbara Sulzberger<br />

Phototransformation of riverine dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the presence of abundant iron:<br />

Effect on DOM bioavailability .................................................................................................540-554<br />

Cutter, Gregory A., Lynda S. Cutter, and Katherine C. Filippino<br />

Sources and cycling of carbonyl sulfide in the Sargasso Sea .................................................555-565<br />

41


Baines, Stephen B., Nicholas S. Fisher, Martina A. Doblin, Gregory A. Cutter, Lynda S. Cutter,<br />

and Brian Cole<br />

Light dependence of selenium uptake by phytoplankton and implications for predicting selenium<br />

incorporation into food webs ..................................................................................................566-578<br />

Armstrong, Evelyn, Julie Granger, Elizabeth L. Mann, and Neil M. Price<br />

Outer-membrane siderophore receptors of heterotrophic oceanic bacteria 579-587<br />

Kritzberg, Emma S., Jonathan J. Cole, Michael L. Pace, Wilhelm Granéli, and Darren L. Bade<br />

Autochthonous versus allochthonous carbon sources to bacteria: Results from whole-lake 13C<br />

addition experiments .............................................................................................................588-596<br />

Malmstrom, Rex R., Ronald P. Kiene, and David L. Kirchman<br />

Identification and enumeration of bacteria assimilating dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in the<br />

North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico ...........................................................................................597-606<br />

Notes<br />

Bearon, R. N., D. Grünbaum, and R. A. Cattolico<br />

Relating cell-level swimming behaviors to vertical population distributions in Heterosigma<br />

akashiwo (Raphidophyceae), a harmful alga ..........................................................................607-613<br />

Park, Sangkyu, Michael T. Brett, Anke Müller-Solger, and Charles R. Goldman<br />

Climatic forcing and primary productivity in a subalpine lake: Interannual variability as a natural<br />

experiment ............................................................................................................................614-619<br />

Comment<br />

Boudreau, Bernard P.<br />

What controls the mixed-layer depth in deep-sea sediments? The importance of particulate<br />

organic carbon flux ................................................................................................................620-622<br />

Smith, Craig R., and Christophe Rabouille<br />

Reply to comment by Boudreau on: What controls the mixed-layer depth in deep-sea sediments?<br />

The importance of POC flux ..................................................................................................623-624<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES<br />

VOL. 266 JANUARY (2004)<br />

Lawrence D, Dagg MJ, Liu H, Cummings SR, Ortner PB, Kelble C<br />

Wind events and benthic-pelagic coupling in a shallow subtropical bay in Florida<br />

Nausch M, Nausch G, Wasmund N.....................................................................................................<br />

Phosphorus dynamics during the transition from nitrogen to phosphate limitation in the central<br />

Baltic Sea<br />

Mutchler T, Sullivan MJ, Fry B.............................................................................................................<br />

Potential of 14N isotope enrichment to resolve ambiguities in coastal trophic relationships<br />

Bolduc F, Afton AD..............................................................................................................................<br />

Hydrologic aspects of marsh ponds during winter on the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain, USA: effects of<br />

structural marsh management<br />

Schmidt K, McClelland JW, Mente E, Montoya JP, Atkinson A, Voss M...............................................<br />

Trophic-level interpretation based on d15N values: implications of tissue-specific fractionation and<br />

amino acid composition<br />

Ruxton GD, Houston DC.....................................................................................................................<br />

Energetic feasibility of an obligate marine scavenger<br />

Podgorsek L, Petri R, Imhoff JF...........................................................................................................<br />

Cultured and genetic diversity, and activities of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria in low-temperature<br />

hydrothermal fluids of the North Fiji Basin<br />

Cummins SP, Roberts <strong>DE</strong>, Zimmerman KD.........................................................................................<br />

Effects of the green macroalga Enteromorpha intestinalis on macrobenthic and seagrass<br />

assemblages in a shallow coastal estuary<br />

Fernández D, López-Urrutia Á, Fernández A, Acuña JL, Harris R........................................................<br />

Retention efficiency of 0.2 to 6 µm particles by the appendicularians Oikopleura dioica and<br />

Fritillaria borealis<br />

Howell KL, Billett DSM, Tyler PA, Davidson R .....................................................................................<br />

42


Feeding ecology of deep-sea seastars (Echinodermata: Asteroidea): a pigment biomarker<br />

approach<br />

Kideys AE, Finenko GA, Anninsky BE, Shiganova TA, Roohi A, Tabari MR, Youseffyan M,<br />

Rostamian MT, Rostami H, Negarestan H...........................................................................................<br />

Physiological characteristics of the ctenophore Beroe ovata in Caspian Sea water<br />

Henry LA, Kenchington E....................................................................................................................<br />

Differences between epilithic and epizoic hydroid assemblages from commercial scallop grounds<br />

in the Bay of Fundy, northwest Atlantic<br />

Marshall DJ, Semmens D, Cook C......................................................................................................<br />

Consequences of spawning at low tide: limited gamete dispersal for a rockpool anemone<br />

Cherel Y, Duhamel G, Gasco N...........................................................................................................<br />

Cephalopod fauna of subantarctic islands: new information from predators<br />

Marsden ID.........................................................................................................................................<br />

Effects of reduced salinity and seston availability on growth of the New Zealand little-neck clam<br />

Austrovenus stutchburyi<br />

Watanabe H, Kubodera T, Ichii T, Kawahara S....................................................................................<br />

Feeding habits of neon flying squid Ommastrephes bartramii in the transitional region of the<br />

central North Pacific<br />

Ouellette D, Desrosiers G, Gagne JP, Gilbert F, Poggiale JC, Blier PU, Stora G<br />

Effects of temperature on in vitro sediment reworking processes by a gallery biodiffusor, the<br />

polychaete Neanthes virens<br />

Thistle D, Sedlacek L ..........................................................................................................................<br />

Emergent and non-emergent species of harpacticoid copepods can be recognized<br />

morphologically<br />

Walker SPW, McCormick MI................................................................................................................<br />

Otolith-check formation and accelerated growth associated with sex change in an annual<br />

protogynous tropical fish<br />

Arai T, Kotake A, Lokman PM, Miller MJ, Tsukamoto K.......................................................................<br />

Evidence of different habitat use by New Zealand freshwater eels Anguilla australis and A.<br />

dieffenbachii, as revealed by otolith microchemistry<br />

Takahashi M, Watanabe Y..................................................................................................................<br />

Growth rate-dependent recruitment of Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus in the Kuroshio-<br />

Oyashio transitional waters<br />

Semmens BX, Buhle ER, Salomon AK, Pattengill-Semmens CV.........................................................<br />

A hotspot of non-native marine fishes: evidence for the aquarium trade as an invasion pathway<br />

Cartamil DP, Lowe CG........................................................................................................................<br />

Diel movement patterns of ocean sunfish Mola mola off southern California<br />

Au DWT, Pollino CA, Wu RSS, Shin PKS, Lau STF, Tang JYM...........................................................<br />

Chronic effects of suspended solids on gill structure, osmoregulation, growth, and triiodothyronine<br />

in juvenile green grouper Epinephelus coioides<br />

Phillips RA, Silk JRD, Croxall JP, Afanasyev V, Briggs DR..................................................................<br />

Accuracy of geolocation estimates for flying seabirds<br />

REVIEW<br />

Sutherland KP, Porter JW, Torres C....................................................................................................<br />

Disease and immunity in Caribbean and Indo-Pacific zooxanthellate corals<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES<br />

VOL. 267 FEBRUARY (2004)<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />

Pardal MA, Cardoso PG, Sousa JP, Marques JC, Raffaelli D<br />

Assessing environmental quality: a novel approach<br />

Raateoja M, Seppälä J, Kuosa H.........................................................................................................<br />

Bio-optical modelling of primary production in the SW Finnish coastal zone, Baltic Sea: fast<br />

repetition rate fluorometry in Case 2 waters<br />

43


Gallager SM, Yamazaki H, Davis CS...................................................................................................<br />

Contribution of fine-scale vertical structure and swimming behavior to formation of plankton layers<br />

on Georges Bank<br />

Steinberg DK, Nelson NB, Carlson CA, Prusak A................................................................................<br />

Production of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in the open ocean by zooplankton<br />

and the colonial cyanobacterium Trichodesmium s..............................................................................<br />

Beucher C, Tréguer P, Corvaisier R, Hapette AM, Elskens M..............................................................<br />

Production and dissolution of biosilica, and changing microphytoplankton dominance in the Bay of<br />

Brest (France)<br />

Kimmel DG, Roman MR......................................................................................................................<br />

Long-term trends in mesozooplankton abundance in Chesapeake Bay, USA: influence of<br />

freshwater input<br />

Irigoien X, Conway DVP, Harris RP.....................................................................................................<br />

Flexible diel vertical migration behaviour of zooplankton in the Irish Sea<br />

Wildish DJ, Hughes-Clarke JE, Pohle GW, Hargrave BT, Mayer LM....................................................<br />

Acoustic detection of organic enrichment in sediments at a salmon farm is confirmed by<br />

independent groundtruthing methods<br />

Clark RP, Edwards MS, Foster MS......................................................................................................<br />

Effects of shade from multiple kelp canopies on an understory algal assemblage<br />

Whitfield PE, Kenworthy WJ, Durako MJ, Hammerstrom KK, Merello MF.............................................<br />

Recruitment of Thalassia testudinum seedlings into physically disturbed seagrass beds<br />

Bastidas C, García EM<br />

Sublethal effects of mercury and its distribution in the coral Porites astreoides<br />

Gochfeld DJ........................................................................................................................................<br />

Predation-induced morphological and behavioral defenses in a hard coral: implications for<br />

foraging behavior of coral-feeding butterflyfishes<br />

Wild C, Rasheed M, Werner U, Franke U, Johnstone R, Huettel M......................................................<br />

Degradation and mineralization of coral mucus in reef environments<br />

Erlandsson J, McQuaid CD.................................................................................................................<br />

Spatial structure of recruitment in the mussel Perna perna at local scales: effects of adults, algae<br />

and recruit size<br />

Petersen JK, Bougrier S, Smaal AC, Garen P, Robert S, Larsen JEN, Brummelhuis E.........................<br />

Intercalibration of mussel Mytilus edulis clearance rate measurements<br />

Grémare A, Duchêne JC, Rosenberg R, David E, Desmalades M........................................................<br />

Feeding behaviour and functional response of Abra ovata and A. nitida compared by image<br />

analysis<br />

Jin T, Qian PY.....................................................................................................................................<br />

Effect of amino acids on larval metamorphosis of the polychaete Hydroides elegans<br />

Donahue MJ........................................................................................................................................<br />

Size-dependent competition in a gregarious porcelain crab Petrolisthes cinctipes (Anomura:<br />

Porcellanidae)<br />

Lombarte A, Popper AN......................................................................................................................<br />

Quantitative changes in the otolithic organs of the inner ear during the settlement period in<br />

European hake Merluccius merluccius<br />

Salvanes AGV, Skjæraasen JE, Nilsen T.............................................................................................<br />

Sub-populations of coastal cod with different behaviour and life-history strategies<br />

Hanson PJ, Koenig CC, Zdanowicz VS...............................................................................................<br />

Elemental composition of otoliths used to trace estuarine habitats of juvenile gag Mycteroperca<br />

microlepis along the west coast of Florida<br />

Sponaugle S, Pinkard D......................................................................................................................<br />

Lunar cyclic population replenishment of a coral reef fish: shifting patterns following oceanic<br />

events<br />

Kooyman GL, Siniff DB, Stirling I, Bengtson JL....................................................................................<br />

Moult habitat, pre- and post-moult diet and post-moult travel of Ross Sea emperor penguins<br />

Bustamante P, Morales CF, Mikkelsen B, Dam M, Caurant F..............................................................<br />

Trace element bioaccumulation in grey seals Halichoerus grypus from the Faroe Islands<br />

44


OCLC NEWSLETTER<br />

JANUARY/FEBRUARY/MARCH 2004, NO. 263<br />

Being relevant in a Web world<br />

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A way to weave your library's collection into Web bookstores.<br />

OCLC publishes Environmental Scan<br />

In its role as library advocate, OCLC recently published The 2003 OCLC Environmental Scan:<br />

Pattern Recognition to engage information professionals in dialogue about various trends<br />

affecting the library community.<br />

Interview with Sal Cilella: Preserving the community memory<br />

Sal Cilella, President and Chief Executive Office of the Indiana Historical Society, shares his<br />

thoughts on how historical societies and libraries work together to preserve the community<br />

memory.<br />

OCLC founder celebrates 90 years<br />

On January 6, OCLC Founder, Frederick G. Kilgour, was honored at a reception in honor of his<br />

90th birthday at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<br />

OCLC by the Numbers<br />

OPHELIA<br />

VOL. 57 NO. 3, <strong>DE</strong>CEMBER 2003<br />

1. The epifauna on the carbonate reefs in the Arctic Ikka Fjord, SW Greenland<br />

Thorbjorn, L.; Petersen, G. H. ............................................................................................... 177-202<br />

2. fate of terrigenous dissolved organic matter (DOM) in estuaries: aggregation and bioavailability<br />

Sondergaard, M.; Stedmon, C. A.; Borch, N. H. .................................................................... 161-176<br />

3. Small bathyal sponge species from east Mediterranean revealed by a non-regular soft bottom<br />

sampling technique<br />

Ilan, M.; Gugel, J.; Galil, B. S.; Janussen, D. ......................................................................... 145-160<br />

4. Atlantic cod Gadus morhua L.: visceral organ topography and the asymetrical distribution of<br />

larval ascaridoid nematodes in the musculature<br />

Smith, J. W.; Hemmingsen, W. ............................................................................................. 137-144<br />

5. Effects of small-scale turbulence on interactions between the heterotrophic dinoflagellate<br />

Oxyrrhis marina and its prey, Isochrysis sp<br />

Havskum, H. ........................................................................................................................ 125-136<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM. INITIAL REPORTS<br />

VOL. 2007 MARCH 2003<br />

1. Leg 207 Summary<br />

2. Explanatory Notes<br />

3. Site Survey and Underway Geophysics: Demerara Rise, Leg 207<br />

4. Site 1257<br />

5. Site 1258<br />

6. Site 1259<br />

7. Site 1260<br />

8. Site 1261<br />

9. Microbial Gases in Black Shale Sequences on the Demerara Rise<br />

Philip A. Meyers, Astrid Forster, Helen Sturt, and the Leg 207 Shipboard Scientific Party<br />

45


10. Molecular Biogeochemistry of Cretaceous Black Shales from the Demerara Rise: Preliminary<br />

Shipboard Results from Sites 1257 and 1258, ODP Leg 207<br />

Astrid Forster, Helen Sturt, Philip A. Meyers, and the Leg 207 Shipboard Scientific Party<br />

Visual core descriptions (VCDs), smear slide and thin section data tables, and digital images are<br />

included in this section. The entire set of core images in PDF format are available in the IMAGES<br />

directory.<br />

Site 1257<br />

Site 1258<br />

Site 1259<br />

Site 1260<br />

Site 1261<br />

This volume contains ASCII versions of P-wave velocity and index properties data tables from the<br />

site chapters and all of the smear slide and thin section data tables presented under "Core<br />

Descriptions." See ASCII Tables.<br />

This volume has data files presented as Excel 97/98 spreadsheets. The files present expanded<br />

coring summary tables, MST splice tables, and radiolarian paleontological data. See<br />

Supplementary Material.<br />

A site map showing the drilling locations for this leg and maps showing the drilling locations of all<br />

Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) and Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) drilling sites are available.<br />

ODP Leg 207 Site Map<br />

ODP Map (Legs 100–current leg)<br />

DSDP Map (Legs 1–96)<br />

SITES and REPOSITORY LOCATIONS Ocean Drilling Program<br />

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN<br />

NOVEMBER 2003<br />

HUMAN EVOLUTION<br />

Stranger in a New Land<br />

By Kate Wong<br />

Stunning finds in the Republic of Georgia overturn long-standing ideas about the first hominids to<br />

leave Africa<br />

BIOTECHNOLOGY<br />

The Unseen Genome: Gems among the Junk<br />

By W. Wayt Gibbs<br />

Hidden layers of information in chromosomes are revolutionizing ideas about inheritance and<br />

disease<br />

ROBOTICS<br />

An Army of Small Robots<br />

By Robert Grabowski, Luis E. Navarro-Serment and Pradeep K. Khosla<br />

Engineers are exploring the versatile potential of toy-size robots that operate in teams.<br />

AVIATION<br />

Flying on Flexible Wings<br />

By Steven Ashley<br />

Future aircraft may fly more like birds, adapting the geometries of their wings to suit changing<br />

flight conditions<br />

NEUROSCIENCE<br />

Why We Sleep<br />

By Jerome M. Siegel<br />

The reasons that we sleep are gradually becoming less enigmatic.<br />

PHYSICS<br />

The Future of String Theory -- A Conversation with Brian Greene<br />

The physicist and best-selling author demystifies the ultimate theories of space and time, the<br />

nature of genius, multiple universes, and more<br />

SPACE TECHNOLOGY<br />

46


The Asteroid Tugboat<br />

By Russell L. Schweickart, Edward T. Lu, Piet Hut and Clark R. Chapman<br />

Building and testing a spacecraft that could push an asteroid into a new orbit may be the best<br />

way to save Earth from catastrophic impacts<br />

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN<br />

<strong>DE</strong>CEMBER 2003<br />

BIOLOGY<br />

Does Race Exist?<br />

By Michael J. Bamshad and Steve E. Olson<br />

From a purely genetic standpoint, no. Nevertheless, genetic information about individuals'<br />

ancestral origins can sometimes have medical relevance<br />

AVIATION<br />

The Equivocal Success of the Wright Brothers<br />

By Daniel C. Schlenoff<br />

The Wrights used aerial control as the key to building and flying the first airplane. But trying to<br />

refine their invention in secret nearly cost them their glory.<br />

BIOTECHNOLOGY<br />

The Unseen Genome: Beyond DNA<br />

By W. Wayt Gibbs<br />

"Epigenetic" information stored as proteins and chemicals surrounding DNA can change the<br />

meaning of genes in growth, aging and cancer<br />

TECHNOLOGY LEA<strong>DE</strong>RS<br />

The Scientific American 50<br />

Our second annual salute to the elite of research, industry and politics whose accomplishments<br />

are shaping a better, wiser technological future for the world.<br />

GEOSCIENCE<br />

The Day the World Burned<br />

By David A. Kring and Daniel D. Durda<br />

The asteroid impact that killed the dinosaurs also ignited a firestorm that consumed the world's<br />

forests<br />

PLANETARY SCIENCE<br />

The New Moon<br />

By Paul D. Spudis<br />

Recent lunar missions have shown that there is still much to learn about Earth's closest neighbor<br />

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN<br />

JANUARY 2004<br />

NEURAL PHARMACOLOGY<br />

Decoding Schizophrenia<br />

By Daniel C. Javitt and Joseph T. Coyle<br />

Insight into signaling in the brain of people with schizophrenia offers new hope for therapy<br />

ASTRONOMY<br />

Our Growing, Breathing Galaxy<br />

By Bart P. Wakker and Philipp Richter<br />

Long assumed to be a relic of the distant past, the Milky Way turns out to be a dynamic, evolving<br />

object<br />

PHYSICS<br />

Atoms of Space and Time<br />

By Lee Smolin<br />

If the amazing theory of loop quantum gravity is correct, space and time are ultimately grainy, not<br />

smooth<br />

47


INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY<br />

RFID: A Key to Automating Everything<br />

By Roy Want<br />

Radio-frequency identification tags and readers stand poised to take over many processes now<br />

accomplished by human toil<br />

INVENTION<br />

The Curious History of the First Pocket Calculator<br />

By Cliff Stoll<br />

It was called the Curta, and it proved lifesaving when its inventor was trapped in a Nazi<br />

concentration camp<br />

ENVIRONMENT<br />

Spring Forward<br />

By Daniel Grossman<br />

As temperatures rise earlier in spring, interdependent species in a number of ecosystems shift<br />

dangerously out of sync<br />

ARCHAEOLOGY<br />

Women and Men at Çatalhöyük<br />

By Ian Hodder<br />

The largest known Neolithic settlement yields clues about the roles played by the sexes in early<br />

agricultural societies<br />

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY<br />

Better Displays with Organic Films<br />

By Webster E. Howard<br />

Light-emitting organic materials can make electronic displays<br />

SPECIAL REPORT<br />

Four Keys to Cosmology<br />

By George Musser<br />

The big bang theory works better than ever. If only cosmologists could figure out that mysterious<br />

acceleration....<br />

SPECIAL REPORT: COSMOLOGY<br />

The Cosmic Symphony<br />

By Wayne Hu and Martin White<br />

Sound waves powerfully shaped the early universe<br />

BIOTECHNOLOGY<br />

Insights into Shock<br />

By Donald W. Landry and Juan A. Oliver<br />

Still a last step before death for thousands of people, shock is shedding some of its medical<br />

mystery and becoming more treatable<br />

SPECIAL REPORT: COSMOLOGY<br />

Out of the Darkness<br />

By Georgi Dvali<br />

A leakage of gravity might cause cosmic acceleration<br />

SPECIAL REPORT: COSMOLOGY<br />

Reading the Blueprints of Creation<br />

By Michael A. Strauss<br />

New surveys highlight extraordinary cosmic structures<br />

CRIMINOLOGY<br />

The Case of the Unsolved Crime Decline<br />

By Richard Rosenfeld<br />

Crime rates in the U.S. plummeted in the 1990s. None of the common theories fully explains why,<br />

however<br />

SPECIAL REPORT: COSMOLOGY<br />

From Slowdown to Speedup<br />

By Adam G. Riess and Michael S. Turner<br />

Supernovae reveal when the expansion of the universe sped up<br />

48


SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN<br />

MARCH 2004<br />

PLANETARY SCIENCE<br />

The Spirit of Exploration<br />

By George Musser<br />

NASA's robot rover scouts unknown terrain on the Angry Red Planet<br />

BIOTECHNOLOGY<br />

The Addicted Brain<br />

By Eric J. Nestler and Robert C. Malenka<br />

Better understanding of how drug abuse produces long-term changes in the brain's reward<br />

circuitry opens up new possibilities for treating addictions<br />

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY<br />

A New Race of Robots<br />

By W. Wayt Gibbs<br />

This month a grueling off-road race through the Mojave Desert may crown the most capable<br />

robotic vehicles ever. But for the engineers behind the machines, the race started long ago.<br />

CLIMATOLOGY<br />

Defusing the Global Warming Time Bomb<br />

By James Hansen<br />

Troubling geologic evidence verifies that human activities are shifting the climate. But practical<br />

actions to clean up the atmosphere could slow the process<br />

ELECTORAL SYSTEMS<br />

The Fairest Vote of All<br />

By Partha Dasgupta and Eric Maskin<br />

All voting systems have drawbacks. But by taking into account how voters rank candidates, one<br />

system gives the truest reflection of the electorate's views<br />

EARTH SCIENCE<br />

The Threat of Silent Earthquakes<br />

By Peter Cervelli<br />

Not all earthquakes cause a noticeable rumbling. Recognizing the quiet types could be a tip-off to<br />

imminent devastating tsunamis and ground-shaking shocks<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA<br />

83 (1) 2003<br />

Guest editorial: FARIÑA, R.A., VIZCAINO, S.F. & STORCH, G.: Xenarthra strange joints for<br />

strange mammals..............................................................................................................................1<br />

FARIÑA, R.A. & VIZCAINO, S.F.: Slow moving or browsers? A note on nomenclature ................ .... 3<br />

McDONALD, H.G.: Xenarthran skeletal anotomy: primitive or derived? (Mammalia, 5<br />

GARCIA, J.E.: Genetic studies in living Xenarthran (A review) (Mammalia, Xenarthra) ....................19<br />

GAUDIN, T.J.: Phylogeny of the Xenarthran (Mammalia).................................................................27<br />

BARGO, M.S.: Biomechanics and palaeobiology of the Xenarthran: The state of the art<br />

(Mammalia, Xenarthra)....................................................................................................................41<br />

STORCH, G.: Fossil Old World “Edentates” (Mammalia) .................................................................51<br />

BLANCO, R.E. & CZERWONOGORA, A.: The gait of Megatherium Cuvier 1796 (Mammalia,<br />

Xenarthra, Megatheriidae)...............................................................................................................61<br />

<strong>DE</strong> IULIIS, G.: Toward a morphofunctional understanding of the humerus of Megatheriinae: The<br />

identity and homology of some diaphyseal humeral features (Mammalia, Xenarthra,<br />

Megatheriidae)................................................................................................................................69<br />

TITO, G., & <strong>DE</strong> IULIIS, G.: Morphofunctional aspects and palaeobiology of the manus in the giant<br />

ground sloth Eremotherium SPILLMANN 1948 (Mammalia, Xenarthra, Megatheriidae)....................79<br />

CHRISTIANSEN, P., & FARIÑA, R.A.: Mass estimation of two fossil ground sloths (Mammalia,<br />

Xenarthra, Megatheriidae)...............................................................................................................95<br />

49


Wetlands Ecology and Management<br />

February 2004, Volume 12, Issue 1<br />

A New Series in WEM....................................................................................................................1-1<br />

Dennis F. Whigham, Jos T.A. Verhoeven<br />

Wetlands of Central America........................................................................................................3-55<br />

Aaron M. Ellison<br />

Instructions for authors...............................................................................................................57-61<br />

50


INSTITUTO <strong>DE</strong> CIENCIAS <strong>DE</strong>L MAR Y LIMNOLOGÍA,<br />

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

UNIDAD ACADÉMICA MAZATLÁN<br />

Av. Cap. Joel Montes Camarena S/N, C.P. 82040, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México.<br />

Apdo. Postal 811, C.P. 82000, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México.<br />

Tels. (669) 9 85 28 45 al 48. Fax: (669) 9 82 61 33<br />

ORGANIZACIÓN ACADÉMICA<br />

DIRECCIÓN<br />

Dr. Adolfo Gracia Gasca<br />

SECRETARIA ACADÉMICA<br />

Dra. María Luisa Machaín Castillo<br />

SECRETARIO TÉCNICO<br />

Biól. Juan Carlos Campos Coy<br />

SECRETARIO ADMINISTRATIVO<br />

Lic. Sergio Domínguez Alvarez<br />

JEFE <strong>DE</strong> LA UNIDAD ACADÉMICA MAZATLÁN<br />

Dr. Federico Páez Osuna<br />

<strong>DE</strong>LEGADO ADMINISTRATIVO<br />

Sr. Román Lizárraga Reyes<br />

CONSEJO ACADÉMICO <strong>DE</strong> LA UNIDAD ACADÉMICA MAZATLÁN<br />

Dr. Michel E. Hendrickx Reners<br />

M. en C. Raquel Briseño Dueñas<br />

Dr. Felipe Amezcua Martínez<br />

Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz<br />

COMISIÓN <strong>DE</strong> BIBLIOTECA “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso Muñoz”<br />

Dr. F. Alberto Abreu Grobois<br />

Dr. José Luis Carballo Cenizo<br />

Ing. Alberto Castro del Río<br />

Sra. María Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />

Ing. Bioq. Roberto Armando Rey Herrera

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