scholarly journals Invertebrates assemblage captured by a pink shrimp's fishery on Amazon continental shelf

2021 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-241
Author(s):  
Priscila Sousa Vilela da Nóbrega ◽  
Cleverson Ranniéri Meira dos Santos ◽  
Ana Patrícia Barros Cordeiro ◽  
Jussara Moretto Martinelli-Lemos

Shrimp trawl fisheries constitute a major threat to continental shelves' biodiversity, given their profound impact on benthic communities. We investigated the composition of an invertebrate assemblage impacted by this type of fishery and possible correlations of the abundance and richness with specific environmental parameters. The activities of the industrial shrimp fleet on the north coast of Brazil were monitored over two years. We analyzed 20,303 specimens belonging to seven phyla (Porifera, Cnidaria, Mollusca, Sipuncula, Annelida, Arthropoda, Echinodermata) and 154 species. There was a predominance of generalist and rare species, given that most species (86) were sporadic. Taxonomic composition patterns were complex, dynamic, and were correlated mainly with the temperature and depth of the Amazon continental shelf, the largest in extension and low depth of the South Atlantic. The crustaceans were dominant in both abundance and taxonomic richness. The influence of environmental factors on the abundance of the main species is discussed. The invertebrates are a neglected component in studies of fisheries impact and important components of the ecological structure of the Amazon coast. They are an essential group for developing a holistic fisheries management approach, which will support the sustainability of the region's fisheries and preserve local aquatic communities.

2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy F. Waterhouse ◽  
Jennifer A. Mackinnon ◽  
Ruth C. Musgrave ◽  
Samuel M. Kelly ◽  
Andy Pickering ◽  
...  

AbstractObservations from Eel Canyon, located on the north coast of California, show that elevated turbulence in the full water column arises from the convergence of remotely generated internal wave energy. The incoming semidiurnal and bottom-trapped diurnal internal tides generate complex interference patterns. The semidiurnal internal tide sets up a partly standing wave within the canyon due to reflection at the canyon head, dissipating all of its energy within the canyon. Dissipation in the near bottom is associated with the diurnal trapped tide, while midwater isopycnal shear and strain is associated with the semidiurnal tide. Dissipation is elevated up to 600 m off the bottom, in contrast to observations over the flat continental shelf where dissipation occurs closer to the topography. Slope canyons are sinks for internal wave energy and may have important influences on the global distribution of tidally driven mixing.


Author(s):  
Pavla Řezníčková ◽  
Veronika Petrovajová ◽  
Jana Nerudová ◽  
Lenka Hadašová ◽  
Radovan Kopp

The succession of standing waters by aquatic macroinvertebrates is a present and insufficiently surveyed topic. This study is addressed to the issue of colonisation of newly created small standing waters. Two fishponds situated in the north of Moravia (Czech Republic) were studied. The aim of this study was to determine the character and colonisation rate of these ponds by macroinvertebrates, to evaluate the abundance, taxonomic composition and changes in composition of freshwater assemblages as a result of the fish stock influence. Basic abiotic parameters were also measured within the sampling occasions (e.g. water temperature, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, pH, total nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations). Samples of aquatic macroinvertebrates were taken monthly during the years 2012 and 2013, by kick sampling method using the hand net. The character of sampled fishponds was very similar, environmental parameters (e.g. area, substrate, depth etc.) were comparable. The colonisation of both fishponds was very fast. The pioneer colonists were mainly insect larvae (e.g. chironomids). Very low numbers of macroinvertebrates as a result of fish stock influence were recorded on both sites during the observation with the highest abundances in summer season.


1970 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Friedmann

The decision of the International Court of Justice in the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases is surely one of the most interesting as well as debatable decisions in the history of the Court. It deals with certain aspects of one of the most important new developments of international law, the doctrine of the Continental Shelf. It also touches on some basic problems of the sources of international law. Among the matters dealt with, in greater or lesser detail, by the Court are the formation of custom in contemporary conditions, the effect of custom upon treaty and, in turn, the possible translation of principles formulated in a multilateral treaty, into universal custom. Above all, the Court was compelled to formulate certain principles of general equity as applicable to the delimitation of the continental shelves between three of the coastal states of the North Sea. It is this attempt of the Court to formulate the general principles of equity applicable to a fair allocation of the resources of the Continental Shelf between neighbors with which the present article will be mainly concerned.


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 957-971
Author(s):  
Tiziano Bo ◽  
Alberto Doretto ◽  
Marco Levrino ◽  
Stefano Fenoglio

Abstract Rivers are heterogeneous and patchy-structured systems in which regional biodiversity of aquatic communities typically varies as a function of local habitat conditions and spatial gradients. Understanding which environmental and spatial constraints shape the diversity and composition of benthic communities is therefore a pivotal challenge for basic and applied research in river ecology. In this study, benthic invertebrates were collected from 27 sites across three hydro-ecoregions with the aim of investigating patterns in α- and β diversity. We first assessed the contribution to regional biodiversity of different and nested spatial scales, ranging from micro-habitat to hydro-ecoregion. Then, we tested differences in α diversity, taxonomic composition and ecological uniqueness among hydro-ecoregions. Variance partitioning analysis was used to evaluate the mechanistic effects of environmental and spatial variables on the composition of macroinvertebrate communities. Macroinvertebrate diversity was significantly affected by all the spatial scales, with a differential contribution according to the type of metric. Sampling site was the spatial scale that mostly contributed to the total richness, while the micro-habitat level explained the largest proportion of variance in Shannon–Wiener index. We found significant differences in the taxonomic composition, with 39 invertebrate families significantly associated with one or two hydro-ecoregions. However, effects of environmental and spatial controls were context dependent, indicating that the mechanisms that promote beta diversity probably differ among hydro-ecoregions. Evidence for species sorting, due to natural areas and stream order, was observed for macroinvertebrate communities in alpine streams, while spatial and land-use variables played a weak role in other geographical contexts.


Author(s):  
Kevin Frediani

Set in the heart of the Scottish Highlands, Inverewe is one of the most spectacular garden locations in the UK. Situated beside the A382 on the North Coast 500 tourist route, the property receives over 100,000 visitors each year, drawn to see a diversity of plants and to enjoy the breathtaking backdrop of mountains and seascape it affords. Since its first plantings in 1864, the property has been a centre for experimental approaches to establishing and growing tender woody and herbaceous perennials, while a diaspora of alumni have gone on to fulfil prominent roles in the horticultural industry over the years. The garden today covers approximately 22 ha of mainly woodland gardens, renowned for the diversity of their designed elements and whose conservation management is based on a thorough understanding, appreciation and analysis of the garden’s historical development and its significance in local, regional and national contexts.In recent years, Inverewe has faced a number of challenges related to the growing impact of global change, with increased occurrences of extreme weather events, and emergent pest and disease incidents associated with climate change and the movement of plants and their vectors, which include human-aided transport of problems between sites. In this context, this article provides a lens on the drivers of change that the plant collection is facing in the early decades of the 21st century. After an introduction to the garden, its evolved collections and management approach, three case studies are highlighted as examples of emerging threats to Inverewe as a garden and work of art. Inverewe is presented as a landscape that endures through adaptation to social, economic and, increasingly, environmental challenges that shape the direction it takes as a garden and plant collection growing on the edge.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 12-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. P. Bondarev ◽  
N. K. Revkov

The study of mollusks-symbionts of the predatory gastropod Rapana venosa is a continuation of the work on the description of the taxonomic composition of the epibiont complex formed on the shell of the rapana. Modern studies of invasive gastropods R. venosa show that the ecological role of this species is not reduced only to predation. On a fairly large rapana shell a specific complex of organisms-epibionts considered as a consortium can be formed, the core of which is R. venosa. The consort of the gastropod mollusk-invader R. venosa is poorly understood and unaccounted for link in benthic communities and the ecosystem of the Black Sea shelf. In order to study the rapana consortian community, sampling were conducted in 7 regions of the Northern part of the Black Sea: 1 – Mamaya, Romania; 2 – the north-western part of the Black Sea, Crimean sector; 3 – Sevastopol, 4 – Alupka, 5 – Yalta – Alushta, 6 – Karadag, 7 – Kerch Strait. The sampling of R. venosa in the coastal zone to a depth of 15 m was carried out with the use of light-diving equipment, while in the deeper zone (up to 40 m), the “Ocean-50” bottom grab was used on board of the RV “Professor Vodyanitsky”. The collection of specimens was carried out totally, each sample was placed in a separate plastic bag indicating the collection region, depth and biotope. Along with the collection of mollusks, visual observations and photographic fixation of hydrobionts in situ were carried out. A total 890 specimens of R. venosa were sampled and analyzed. Compared with previous studies, the taxonomic list of consonant mollusks of R. venosa has been significantly expanded. The mollusc-consorts found on rapana have been classified into three classes: Polyplacophora, Bivalvia, Gastropoda. In this part of the investigation Polyplacophora, presented in a consortium of 3 species of 2 genera of 2 families, and Bivalvia, 7 species of 7 genera of 5 families, were considered. It was found that mollusks are an important component of the consortium of rapana. On rocky rapana ecomorph chitons were observed at a frequency of up to 25 %, on sandy rapana — up to 10 %, in the consortium of rapans as a whole chitons were found in around 12 % frequency. More than 80 % of the all chitons total number on rapana is in Lepidochitona cinerea. The occurrence of Bivalvia in most of the investigated regions is 50–75 %. The area of covering the shell of rapana with bivalves is usually 2–20 %, sometimes reaching 85 %. The most common species of bivalves and mollusks as a whole in the consortium of the Black Sea rapana is the Mytilaster lineatus. Most Bivalvia have a close relationship with the core of the consortium attaching to the surface of the shell of the rapana, and at the earliest stages and to the surface of the epiphytes. Representatives of Polyplacophora are confined mainly to the rocky form of rapana, while Bivalvia show a greater species diversity in the consociation of the ecomorph R. venosa of loose grounds (6 species) than the rocky form (3 species). Differences in the taxonomic composition of epibionts and the percent coverage of the shell of the two ecoforms of R. venosa are predominantly determined by specific dynamic impact of the water mass in the zones of development of rocky and loose grounds.


Author(s):  
Arturo Acero P. ◽  
Jaime Garzón Ferreira

A total of 81 species of eels are known from the north coast of Colombia and Venezuela; 66 of them are continental shelf inhabitants. Anguilla rostrata (Lesueur) and Echiophis punctifer (Kaup) are new records for the Colombian Caribbean.


EMPIRISMA ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fathimatuz Zahra Dan Abdul Azis

Pati is a region on the north coast, according to the hypothesis of the researcher, the region is divided into three categories. The northern regions are more religious, the central is more plural, while the southern region is in the middle. In the central region there are many relics of tombs believed to be the those of the Muslim proselytizers in the area of Pati. The one that attracts the researcher is a tomb in the Gambiran area, where there are five local Muslim saints buried, one of them belons to mbah Hendro Kusumo, the son of Syech Ahmad Mutamakkin. This article attempts to trace back the spreading of Islam in Pati based on the existence of thetomb of Mbah Hendro Kusumo. It wants to answer question of whethere the existence of his tomb is due to his studying there or marital relationship, and how it relates to the spreading of Islam.Keywords: Mbah Hendro Kusumo, Traces of Islamic Dakwah, Islam


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