scholarly journals MARINE HEMIPTERA OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY, INCLUDING THE FIRST FRESH-WATER SPECIES OF HALOBATES ESCHSCHOLTZ (GERRIDAE, VELIIDAE, HERMATOBATIDAE AND CORIXIDAE)

1982 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
John T. Polhemus
Author(s):  
G. M. Spooner

The work of which an account is here given was largely carried out from the autumn of 1937 to the spring of 1940, when it was interrupted by the war. In taking it up again (in July 1945) while, facilities for field work are still limited, the author feels it useful to publish results as they stand and indicate where further work is considered advisable.In examinations of the free-swimming bottom fauna of the Tamar and other estuaries, attention was inevitably drawn to the populations of Gammarus species, which make up the greater bulk of it. Before quantitative observations were planned, some interesting points came to light with regard to the qualitative composition of populations. This aspect lent itself more readily to study and, though byno means a new field for exploration, soon proved worth examining ingreater detail than previous workers had attempted.The broad fact of a replacement of one Gammarus species by another in passing up an estuary was well enough known, though exact knowledge for the British Isles only starts from the time when G. zaddachi Sexton was recognized as a regular member of the upper estuarine fauna of the Tay (Bassindale, 1933; Alexander, Southgate & Bassindale, 1935) and of the Deben (Serventy, 1935). This species proved to be the main brackish-water species overlapping with the marine G. locusta (L.) near the seaward end, and with the fresh-water G. pulex (L.) at the river end (or ‘head’) of the estuary. The status in estuaries of two other brackish-water species, G. duebeni Lillj. and G. chevreuxi Sexton, remained obscure.


Author(s):  
C. P. Spencer

In the course of some studies on the kinetics of growth and the biochemical activities of a marine diatom it became desirable to obtain bacteria-free cultures. The classical method of obtaining such pure algal cultures involves either repeatedly washing single cells in sterile medium or obtaining discrete bacteria-free algal colonies by growth on a solid medium. Both these methods have been widely applied to fresh-water species by Pringsheim (1946) and others, whilst Chu (1946) has used both methods with the marine diatom Nitzschia closterium (Ehrenberg) Wm. Smith forma minutissima.


The non-marine Mollusca from the Eemian (Last) Interglacial deposits at Bobbitshole, Ipswich, are analyzed. The fauna is a local one of marsh and fresh-water species and contains very few species which appear to have been washed in from other environments. The more common Mollusca are arranged into groups of climatically tolerant, less tolerant and least tolerant species, and the percentage frequency of both species and groups is analyzed through the deposit. Tolerant species dominate in the lower part of the deposit, while the less and least tolerant groups become successively important higher up. A puzzling secondary maximum of tolerant species near the top of the deposit is discussed. The conclusions about local and climatic conditions reached from the Mollusca agree closely with those derived from the plants. It is concluded that the relative abundance of the different species of Mollusca, rather than the presence or absence of isolated specimens of certain species, is important in deducing the conditions under which they lived.


1897 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 56-56
Author(s):  
William H. Ashmead

The interesting new species of water-bug described below was received some time ago from Abbé P. A. Bégin, of Sherbrooke, Canada. It was captured swimming on a fresh-water stream some little distance above Sherbrooke, and is of more than ordinary interest, from the fact that it belongs to the genus Halobatopsis, Bianchi, a genus not yet recognized in the North American fauna, and only recently characterized, being based upon the South American Halobates platensis, Berg., also a fresh-water species.


1986 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Harry Allen

The northern part of North Australia is not far from Java and Timor. There are great numbers of influences in the North Western part of Australia from Indonesian region. The coast alligator river area is 200 kilometres east of Darwin, Northern Territory is now 60 kilometres from the coast to the mountain area. The plain area is flat and the water is salty, being tidal on the coast. Further inland the river is fresh water. To day there are few mangroves in this area, but there is evidence that mangroves were more widespread between 6.000 - 3.000 BP. During the wet season the coastal plain is flooded.


1857 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 442-451
Author(s):  
Gregory

In two papers, read before this Society, and subsequently published in the Microscopical Journal, I described and figured a large number of new species of Diatoms, chiefly marine, which I had found in the Glenshira sand.This sand was deposited by the Dhu Loch of Glenshira, at a period geologically recent, when that lake occupied a higher level than it now does, and extended about two miles farther up the valley. That the Dhu Loch at that period, as well as now, communicated with Loch Fine, so that at high tide the salt water flowed into the lakes, while at low water the current, as in a tidal estuary, flowed outwards, is proved by the fact, that the sand then deposited contains more marine than fresh-water species.


Copeia ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 1989 (4) ◽  
pp. 1100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim M. Berra ◽  
K. A. Bishop ◽  
S. A. Allen ◽  
D. A. Pollard ◽  
M. G. Cook

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document