scholarly journals Comments on ‘The biology and functional morphology ofArctica islandica’ by Brian Morton,Marine Biology Research, 2011

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iain D. Ridgway
2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 313-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Fenchel ◽  
Franz Uiblein

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana I. Neto ◽  
Afonso C. L. Prestes ◽  
José M. N. Azevedo ◽  
Roberto Resendes ◽  
Nuno Álvaro ◽  
...  

The oldest reference to marine life in Formigas Islets (oriental group of the Azores archipelago) goes back to the 16th century. Nevertheless, their macroalgal flora is poorly known, the published information mainly resulting from occasional collections of sporadic visitors. To overcome this and contribute to the knowledge of Azorean macroalgal flora at both local and regional scales, a thorough investigation was conducted in 1990 and 1991 under two expeditions promoted by the Marine Biology Research Group of the Department of Biology, University of the Azores. Collections and presence data recordings were undertaken at the littoral and sublittoral levels down to approximately 40 m, in an area of approximately 0.04 km2. This paper lists the taxonomic records and provides information regarding each species’ ecology and occurrence on the Islets’ littoral. A total of 320 specimens are registered (including taxa identified only at generic level) belonging to 90 taxa of macroalgae, from which 70 were diagnosed at species level. The confirmed species comprise 39 Rhodophyta, 12 Chlorophyta and 19 Ochrophyta (Phaeophyceae), distributed in 22 orders (13 Rhodophyta, 3 Chlorophyta and 6 Ochrophyta) and 37 families (24 Rhodophyta, 6 Chlorophyta and 7 Ochrophyta). Sixty-one species represent new records for the Islets, from which Botryocladia macaronesica Afonso-Carrillo, Sobrino, Tittley & Neto and Laurencia viridis Gil-Rodriguez & Haroun are Macaronesian endemisms. Most species are native to the Azores, but six have an uncertain origin and four are introduced (the Rhodophyta Asparagopsis armata Harvey; Laurencia dendroidea J.Agardh; Neoizziella divaricata (C.K.Tseng) S.-M.Lin, S.-Y.Yang & Huisman and the Ochrophyta Hydroclathrus tilesii (Endlicher) Santiañez & M.J.Wynne).


Nature ◽  
1953 ◽  
Vol 171 (4358) ◽  
pp. 828-829
Author(s):  
N. B. EALES

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junjie Wei ◽  
Yinfei Zheng ◽  
Tao Chen

Underwater sensing has extraordinary significance in ocean exploration (e.g., marine resources development, marine biology research, marine environment reconnaissance), but the great difference between the marine environment and the land environment...


Terminology ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Manuel Ureña Gómez-Moreno

Novel metaphorical expressions are understudied in traditional approaches to terminology because they behave as sporadic units incapable of structuring whole discourse events. To show that this assumption is wrong, this paper presents a case study of novel bioeconomics metaphors in an academic marine biology research article (Landa 1998). They were analysed following the Career of Metaphor Theory (Bowdle and Gentner 2005), a framework for the description of novel metaphor in usage, and the text-linguistics approach to term description (Collet 2004), which suggests criteria for term definition that challenge the tenets of monolithic terminology models. The analysis of unexpected metaphors identified in the text suggests that these units should be considered proto-terms experienced as deliberate rhetorical and conceptual devices. Pragmatically speaking, the metaphors are part and parcel of the writer’s discursive strategy to communicate specialised knowledge to her peers. Conceptually speaking, the metaphors are essential building blocks of the article’s mental model.


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