1961 ◽  
Vol s3-102 (57) ◽  
pp. 15-21
Author(s):  
G. OWEN

Adult specimens of Solemya parkinsoni Smith, embedded in mud at a depth of 50 cm or more, were collected near low water (spring tide). The animal burrows with the anterior end downwards and does not maintain an opening to the surface. An inhalant current is drawn into the mantle cavity anteriorly on each side of the foot, while an exhalant current leaves by the single, posteriorly situated aperture. This is probably a respiratory current, bottom material entering the mantle cavity as a result of the muscular activity of the mantle and foot. The course of the alimentary canal is described, and the problem of feeding and nutrition correlated with the extreme reduction of the gut exhibited by S.parkinsoni discussed. It is suggested that an initial breakdown of organic material may take place in the mantle cavity.


Author(s):  
J. H. Orton

Echinus esculentus, the larger common sea-urchin, occurs in the British Isles between tide-marks on rocky shores at about low-water spring-tide level in the localities given in Table I, page 292. It is, however, absent from apparently suitable foreshores in the Plymouth district, for reasons which are discussed in the present paper. Chadwick (1) states that “In Port Erin Bay it may be collected by hand on the beach, and on the ruined breakwater at low water of spring tides.” Elmhirst (2) records that “In this district (Millport) E. esculentus occurs abundantly between tide-marks in spring and early summer on rocky coasts; a few may be found at almost any other season. About February or early March a shoreward migration seems to set in, so that in suitable weather conditions some hundreds may be collected at springs between April and June. Then their abundance decreases until about November,from when until January it is at a minimum.”


1966 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 101-102
Author(s):  
Sidney Homer
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Karnadi .
Keyword(s):  

AbstrakDaerah Desa Limbung merupakan salah satudaerah rawa yang dipengaruhi oleh pasang surut yang terletak di KecamatanSungai Raya Kabupaten Kubu Raya yang saat ini sebagian besar belum dikembangkandan dimanfaatkan menjadi lahan pertanian. Hal ini menyebabkan masih rendahnyapendapatan penduduk dalam memproduksi hasil pertaniannya. Untuk itu, setelahdilakukan perbaikan dalam hal pola tanam, yakni dalam pemilihan jenis tanamandan jadwal penanaman yang tepat diharapkan dapat meningkatkan produksi hasilpertanian dan meningkatkan kesejahteraan hidup para petani Kecamatan SungaiRaya Kabupaten Kubu Raya, khususnya untuk Desa Limbung. Dalam penelitian ini,untuk menganalisi permasalahan yang ada diperlukan data primer dan datasekunder. Data primer meliputi data pergerakan pasang surut di lapangan selama27 jam dan data pola tanam yang biasa dilakukan oleh petani Desa Limbung. Untukdata sekunder meliputi data hidrologi dan klimatologi serta data pergerakanpasang surut. Analisis yang akan dilakukan meliputi analisis hidrometri, analisishidrologi, analisis pola tanam dan analisis pengelolaan air. Hasil akhirdidapat bahwa untuk daerah Desa Limbung masih dipengaruhi adanya pasang surutair laut dengan ketinggian spring tide 181,00 cm dan neap tide51,00 cm. Dari analisis kebutuhan air tanaman dengan beberapa alternatif polatanam, didapat pola tanam yang paling baik dengan kebutuhan air tanaman per haripaling terkecil adalah pola tanam Jagung Jagung Jagung dengan kebutuhan airsebesar 4,37 mm/hari dan pola tanam Padi Padi Padi dengan kebutuhan airsebesar 4,58 mm/hari. Berdasarkan zona pengelolaan air yang ada di daerah DesaLimbung dapat dibedakan dua zona pengelolaan air yaitu ZPA I (tanamanperkebunan) dan ZPA VIII (tanaman padi tadah hujan). Sumber air untuk memenuhikebutuhan air tanaman berasal dari saluran tersier yang terdapat di arealpertanian.Kata-kata kunci: pasangsurut, pola tanam, kebutuhan air tanaman


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 106
Author(s):  
Yuhan Yan ◽  
Dehai Song ◽  
Xianwen Bao ◽  
Nan Wang

The Ou River, a medium-sized river in the southeastern China, is examined to study the estuarine turbidity maximum (ETM) response to rapidly varied river discharge, i.e., peak river discharge (PRD). This study analyzes the difference in ETM and sediment transport mechanisms between low-discharge and PRD during neap and spring tides by using the Finite-Volume Community Ocean Model. The three-dimensional model is validated by in-situ measurements from 23 April to 22 May 2007. In the Ou River Estuary (ORE), ETM is generally induced by the convergence between river runoff and density-driven flow. The position of ETM for neap and spring tides is similar, but the suspended sediment concentration during spring tide is stronger than that during neap tide. The sediment source of ETM is mainly derived from the resuspension of the seabed. PRD, compared with low-discharge, can dilute the ETM, but cause more sediment to be resuspended from the seabed. The ETM is more seaward during PRD. After PRD, the larger the peak discharge, the longer the recovery time will be. Moreover, the river sediment supply helps shorten ETM recovery time. Mechanisms for this ETM during a PRD can contribute to studies of morphological evolution and pollutant flushing.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 997-1009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guizhi Wang ◽  
Shuling Wang ◽  
Zhangyong Wang ◽  
Wenping Jing ◽  
Yi Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract. To investigate variation in nitrite, nitrate, phosphate, and silicate in a spring–neap tide in a coral reef system influenced by groundwater discharge, we carried out a time-series observation of these nutrients and 228Ra, a tracer of groundwater discharge, in the Luhuitou fringing reef at Sanya Bay in the South China Sea. The maximum 228Ra, 45.3 dpm 100 L−1, appeared at low tide and the minimum, 14.0 dpm 100 L−1, appeared during a flood tide in the spring tide. The activity of 228Ra was significantly correlated with water depth and salinity in the spring–neap tide, reflecting the tidal-pumping feature of groundwater discharge. Concentrations of all nutrients exhibited strong diurnal variation, with a maximum in the amplitude of the diel change for nitrite, nitrate, phosphate, and silicate in the spring tide of 0.46, 1.54, 0.12, and 2.68 µM, respectively. Nitrate and phosphate were negatively correlated with water depth during the spring tide but showed no correlation during the neap tide. Nitrite was positively correlated with water depth in the spring and neap tide due to mixing of nitrite-depleted groundwater and nitrite-rich offshore seawater. They were also significantly correlated with salinity (R2  ≥  0.9 and P < 0.05) at the ebb flow of the spring tide, negative for nitrate and phosphate and positive for nitrite, indicating the mixing of nitrite-depleted, nitrate- and phosphate-rich less saline groundwater and nitrite-rich, nitrate- and phosphate-depleted saline offshore seawater. We quantified variation in oxidized nitrogen (NOx) and phosphate contributed by biological processes based on deviations from mixing lines of these nutrients. During both the spring and neap tide biologically contributed NOx and phosphate were significantly correlated with regression slopes of 4.60 (R2  =  0.16) in the spring tide and 13.4 (R2  =  0.75) in the neap tide, similar to the composition of these nutrients in the water column, 5.43 (R2  =  0.27) and 14.2 (R2  =  0.76), respectively. This similarity indicates that the composition of nutrients in the water column of the reef system was closely related with biological processes during both tidal periods, but the biological influence appeared to be less dominant, as inferred from the less significant correlations (R2  =  0.16) during the spring tide when groundwater discharge was more prominent. Thus, the variability of nutrients in the coral reef system was regulated mainly by biological uptake and release in a spring–neap tide and impacted by mixing of tidally driven groundwater and offshore seawater during spring tide.


Author(s):  
Walter Garstang
Keyword(s):  

The crab whose habits I now describe has not previously been recorded as an inhabitant of British seas. I found two specimens, both male, imbedded in a patch of coarse shell sand on the south side of Drake's Island at low water, spring tides: one on August 11th, 1896, and the other on the following day.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilson Alves de Paiva

A fictional book with five short stories that address the main pandemics in the world. The first story takes place in Ancient Greece, in 428 BC at the time of the Peloponnesian War. Tavros, the main character flees the plague by traveling to Gaul and discovers a mysterious water spring near the village of the Parisii. In AD 166, when Rome, is devasted by the plague, Marcus Aurelius sends out soldiers to the North. One of them, Lucius, arrives in the region of Lutecia and finds the same fountain that Tavros had been to. The water from this spring gives him strength to escape from the persecution of Christians and Jews. In his old age, Lucius becomes a Church elder and writes letters. One of them was read, many centuries later, by a Franciscan Parisian monk during the Middle Ages, who decides to pilgrimage to Jerusalem but is surprised by the Black Death. Back home, he is saved by the water spring, builds an orphanage and has his life converted into a book - which is red by a young journalist who takes the ship Demerara with his fiancée to Brazil in order to avoid the World War I, the Spanish flu and some Russian spies. The last story is about a Brazilian professor, called Lucius Felipe who, in 2019, travels to Paris to develop his postdoctoral studies. Unfortunately he has to return to Brazil due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But not before having visited Lutetia’s fountain and felt its power and the memories it holds.


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