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Numerical classification analysis of infaunal composition and distribution on two Oregon coast beachesNunez Dupre, Jose D. 15 December 1978 (has links)
Graduation date: 1979
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Distribution of benthic fishes on the continental shelf and slope of the Oregon coastDay, Donald Stewart 07 July 1967 (has links)
The 36 samples collected with a 22-foot semi-balloon shrimp
trawl at depths from 40 to 1,829 meters off the central coast of
Oregon between July 1961 and June 1962 provided preliminary data
on the distribution, species composition, and associations of benthic
fishes with respect to depth and sediment type.
Sixty-seven species of bottom fishes representing 21 families
were collected; 86 percent of the total number of fishes was composed
of specimens from the families Pleuronectidae, Scorpaenidae,
and Bothidae.
Four communities of benthic fishes were found off the central
Oregon coast within the depth interval from 40 to 1 ,829 meters.
They were characterized by two or three dominant species, depth,
and average sediment type. Ninety-seven percent of the species
occurring in the communities showed high abundance in only one
community. Some species also demonstrated size segregation by
communities.
The total number of species collected in progressively deeper
communities was 26 (42 to 73 meters), 31 (119 to 199 meters), 20
(594 to 1,143 meters), and 9 (1,383 to 1,829 meters). Therefore
the highest number of speciesoccurred in the community on the outer
continental shelf and upper slope, while the lowest number of species
occurred at the extreme depths on the continental slope. The number
of species found on the continental shelf and slope were similar.
Species inhabiting the continental slope, however, usually occurred
over greater depth ranges.
A comparison of the catches of the 22-foot shrimp trawl and a
94-foot fish trawl indicated that the small trawl used in this study
retained comparatively few large fishes or semi-pelagic species.
Fishes of the genus Sebastodes were grossly undersampled and probably
comprised a major portion of the fish population, especially
between the depths of 183 to 547 meters. / Graduation date: 1968
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Analysis of the benthic Cumacea and Gammaridean Amphipoda from the western Beaufort SeaCastillo Alarcon, Jorge Gonzalo 18 August 1975 (has links)
A multidisciplinary western Beaufort Sea Ecological Cruise
(WEBSEC) was conducted from August 15 to September 20, 1971.
During the cruise, one hundred ninety-nine 0.1 m² Smith-McIntyre
grabs samples were taken at forty stations located on the continental
shelf and slope of the western Beaufort Sea. The Gammaridean
Amphipoda and Cumacea collected were sorted and identified.
Each sample was analyzed for the number of species and specimens
within those groups. The data for all samples at each station were
pooled to obtain station data; these were analyzed for abundance,
diversity at each station, and similarity between stations.
Environmental parameters including sediment data, temperature,
salinity and organic carbon content measured during the
same cruise were also analyzed for each station.
The diversity indices chosen were the Simpson index (SDI)
and the Shannon-Wiener index (H'[subscript e]). The results obtained show a e
relatively high diversity and animal density in the outer continental
shelf, but low diversity values on the inner continental shelf and
slope. The lowest SDI value obtained is 0.43 at 2572 m depth.
The SDI values on the outer continental shelf are higher than 0.9 and
compare well with values obtained in more temperate regions.
The similarity between stations is low, and the percentage of
rare species found is high. This indicates a patchy distribution of
the Amphipoda and Cumacea fauna.
The variability of the processes affecting the benthic environment
of the western Beaufort Sea suggest that more intensive and
seasonal studies are necessary in order to understand the seasonal
as well as the annual variation of the infauna of the western Beaufort
Sea. / Graduation date: 1976
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Exposure to strangers does not cause pregnancy distribution or infanticide in the gray-tailed voleDe la Maza, Helen M. 07 April 1997 (has links)
Numerous laboratory studies with at least 12 species of rodents have reported that exposure of females to strange males results in pregnancy disruption or infanticide. The proximate causes and ultimate benefits of these behaviors have been proposed from an evolutionary perspective. To determine if exposure to strange males or females caused pregnancy disruption and (or) infanticide in a resident gray-tailed vole (Microtus canicaudus) population, pregnancy rate and juvenile recruitment were monitored in populations of 12 female and 12 male voles following introduction of unfamiliar adults. These experiments were conducted in 12 0.2 ha enclosures using three treatments and a control. Every 10 days 12 males, six males, or six females were removed and replaced in the three treatments, respectively, or the populations were left unmanipulated in the control (3 replicates/treatment). The time to first parturition, time between parturitions, number of juveniles recruited/parturition, and percent of births followed by lactation did not vary among the controls
and three treatments. The only observable effects of treatment were a slight non-significant delay in time to first birth in the 12-male treatment and a slightly significant difference in the number of pregnancies per female. These results do not support previous laboratory studies indicating that exposure to strangers causes pregnancy disruption and (or) infanticide at high rates. Therefore, in field conditions, little evidence was found indicating that female gray-tailed voles' reproductive fitness declines after exposure to strangers. I propose that results from laboratory studies on behavioral aspects of mammals should be validated with field data prior to being extrapolated to natural populations and applied to evolutionary paradigms. / Graduation date: 1997
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Habitat use by opossums in an urban environment /Meier, Karen Elizabeth. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 1983. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 56-61). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Des animaux dans l'art aztèque.Bernasconi, Pierre, January 1959 (has links)
Thesis.
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Ecological preferences of benthic foraminifera in the eastern South Atlantic : distribution patterns, stable carbon isotopic composition, and paleoceanographic implications = Ökologische Ansprüche benthischer Foraminiferen im östlichen Südatlantik : Faunenverbreituhg, Zusammensetzung stabiler Kohlenstoffisotope und paläozeanographische Bedeutung /Licari, Laetitia. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Bremen, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-159).
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Molecular epidemiology of rabies in KwaZulu Natal, South AfricaCoetzee, Peter. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.) (Microbiology)-University of Pretoria, 2005. / Abstract in English. Includes bibliography. Available on the internet via the World Wide Web.
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On the superposition of fertilization on parthenogenesis ... /Moore, Carl Richard, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1916. / "A Private edition distributed by the University of Chicago Libraries." "Reprinted from Biological bulletin, Vol. XXXI, No. 3, Sept., 1916." "Literature cited": p. 177-179. Also available on the Internet.
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Melanophores : functional and morphological studies of intracellular transport and transfer of melanosomes /Aspengren, Sara. January 2006 (has links)
Univ., Diss.--Göteborg, 2006. / Enth. außerdem 5 Zeitschriftenaufsätze.
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