scholarly journals Corrigendum to “Accumulation and potential for transport of microplastics in stormwater drains into marine environments, Perth region, Western Australia” [Mar. Pollut. Bull. 168 (2021) 112362]

2022 ◽  
Vol 174 ◽  
pp. 113247
Author(s):  
Natasha Lutz ◽  
James Fogarty ◽  
Andrew Rate ◽  
Mark J. Hackett
1991 ◽  
Vol 128 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Riding ◽  
Stanley M. Awramik ◽  
Barbara M. Winsborough ◽  
Karen M. Griffin ◽  
Robert F. Dill

AbstractSubtidal columnar stromatolites up to 2.5 m high near Lee Stocking Island in the Exuma Cays, Bahamas, have surface mats approximately equally composed of algae and cyanobacteria. The stromatolites are composed of fine–medium oöid and peloid sand. This sediment is supplied to the growing stromatolite surfaces by strong tidal currents which lift grains into suspension and sweep migrating dunes over the columns. The algae include an unidentified filamentous chlorophyte, and numerous diatom species mostly belonging to Mastogloia, Nitzschia and Navicula. The dominant cyanobacteria are two oscillatoriacean species, both probably belonging to Schizothrix. Trapping of sediment is mainly effected by the unidentified chlorophyte which is veneered by epiphytic diatoms. Grains are bound into a mucilaginous mat composed of diatoms and cyanobacteria. Cyanobacteria alone would not be able to trap and bind coarse sediment so effectively in this environment. In being coarse-grained and having a significant eualgal component to their mats, these stromatolites are similar to subtidal columnar stromatolites at Shark Bay, Western Australia. The Lee Stocking stromatolites are physically stressed by high velocity tidal currents and mobile sediment. The Shark Bay stromatolites are stressed by hypersalinity. In both cases stress deters grazers, encrusters and bioeroders. These coarse-grained eualgal stromatolites contrast with micritic and predominantly prokaryotic stromatolites of most Recent marine environments, and are not analogues for most pre-Phanerozoic stromatolites. They appear to be a response to changing stromatolitic mat components in the Cenozoic.


Sedimentology ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 60 (7) ◽  
pp. 1559-1582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara J. Akin ◽  
Peir K. Pufahl ◽  
Eric E. Hiatt ◽  
Franco Pirajno

2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (11) ◽  
pp. 1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Wernberg ◽  
Fernando Tuya ◽  
Mads S. Thomsen ◽  
Gary A. Kendrick

Understanding patterns of species richness is a major goal for ecologists, especially in space-limited habitats where many organisms live on top of others (epibiosis, e.g. by algae growing on gastropods in marine environments). We tested the hypotheses that species richness of epiflora on the gastropod Turbo torquatus would not differ between regions with similarly rich algal floras, and that epifloral richness would increase with increasing gastropod size. Macroalgal floras of Hamelin Bay (HB), Marmion (M), Jurien Bay (JB) and Kalbarri (K), Western Australia, ranged from ∼20 to 40 species reef–1 (JB = HB = M ≥ K). Epiflora on small T. torquatus (shell area <150 cm2) did not differ among regions but epifloral richness increased with increasing basibiont size. Large T. torquatus (>150 cm2) were only found in Hamelin Bay and Marmion, where epifloral richness differed substantially. Epifloral richness was positively related to basibiont size in Marmion but not in Hamelin Bay. However, densities of patellid limpets on large T. torquatus were ∼4× higher in Hamelin Bay than in Marmion, implying that limpet grazing suppresses epifloral richness. Epifloral richness on turbinids is not simply associated with regional species pools or gastropod size; rather, biological interactions at the scale of individual basibionts apparently govern broad scale patterns of epibiosis.


Author(s):  
Alan J. Kohn ◽  
Kama N. Almasi

Previously unknown in Conus (Mollusca: Gastropoda) and poorly documented in the Australian region, imposex is demonstrated in 80% of females of six Conus species from Rottnest Island, Western Australia. In no case were the effects sufficiently severe to cause sterility, and reproduction appeared normal. Specimens from the same location preserved in 1975 were unaffected. With more than 500 species, Conus is the largest genus of marine molluscs. Because many species are conspicuous, widely distributed, and occur in populations whose past densities are known, they could serve as monitors of artificially induced pseudohermaphroditism and an early warning of future population responses to pollutants in marine environments at low latitudes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 646 ◽  
pp. 79-92
Author(s):  
RE Scheibling ◽  
R Black

Population dynamics and life history traits of the ‘giant’ limpet Scutellastra laticostata on intertidal limestone platforms at Rottnest Island, Western Australia, were recorded by interannual (January/February) monitoring of limpet density and size structure, and relocation of marked individuals, at 3 locations over periods of 13-16 yr between 1993 and 2020. Limpet densities ranged from 4 to 9 ind. m-2 on wave-swept seaward margins of platforms at 2 locations and on a rocky notch at the landward margin of the platform at a third. Juvenile recruits (25-55 mm shell length) were present each year, usually at low densities (<1 m-2), but localized pulses of recruitment occurred in some years. Annual survival rates of marked limpets varied among sites and cohorts, ranging from 0.42 yr-1 at the notch to 0.79 and 0.87 yr-1 on the platforms. A mass mortality of limpets on the platforms occurred in 2003, likely mediated by thermal stress during daytime low tides, coincident with high air temperatures and calm seas. Juveniles grew rapidly to adult size within 2 yr. Asymptotic size (L∞, von Bertalanffy growth model) ranged from 89 to 97 mm, and maximum size from 100 to 113 mm, on platforms. Growth rate and maximum size were lower on the notch. Our empirical observations and simulation models suggest that these populations are relatively stable on a decadal time scale. The frequency and magnitude of recruitment pulses and high rate of adult survival provide considerable inertia, enabling persistence of these populations in the face of sporadic climatic extremes.


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