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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Plankton patchiness and ecosystem stability

Kimmerer, William J January 1980 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy) / Bibliography: leaves 163-177. / Microfiche. / xi, 177 leaves, bound ill., maps 29 cm
2

Some Aspects of the Ecology of Lingula (Brachiopoda) in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii

Worcester, William S 01 December 1969 (has links)
Lingula is one of the most morphologlcally conservative genera known. Thls brachiopod has remained essentially unmodified for 350-400 mllllon years (Hyman, 1959. Paine, 1963). It is one of the oldest, if not the oldest, llvlng animal genus wlth a fossil record, and is well represented in the geologic column from the Ordovician. Deposits containing Lingula are thought to have been formed in a shallow, warm, sea water environment (Weller, 1957, Cloud, 1948). Their fossil remains occur on all continents (except possibly Africa) in most kinds of sedimentary facies, but most frequently ln black-shales and related sediments (Moore, Lalioker and Fisher, 1952). [...] This investigation, which extended from June 1967 to February 1969, deals with the distribution, limiting factors, interspecific interactions, feeding, growth and other aspects of the life history of Lingula reevii in the southern sector of Kaneohe Bay. The main objectives were 1) to understand the ecological position of Lingula reevii, especially with respect to limiting factors, interspecific interactions, distributional pattern and growth and 2) to use this ecological information as an aid in the understanding of the ancient environments in which Lingula is found as a fossil. / Typescript. Bibliography: leaves 48-49.
3

Some Aspects of the Ecology of a Bivalve Mollusk in Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii

Higgins, John H 01 June 1969 (has links)
Typescript. Bibliography: leaves 46-47.
4

The role of Sagitta enflata in the southern Kaneohe Bay ecosystem

Szyper, James P 12 1900 (has links)
The chaetognath Sagitta enflata dominates the standing stock of macrozooplankton,and of planktonic carnivores, in the southern basin of Kaneohe Bay. During 1973-74, sampling with vertical net hauls showed no horizontal patchiness in the population. The abundance varied temporally, mainly over periods of months; shorter-term variations were similar to those expected between replicate hauls. Between 1968-69 and 1973-74, both the stock and the dominance of Sagitta in the community increased; both may be related to enrichment of the basin with sewage. Individual Sagitta eat an average of seven prey items per animal per day. The ration in terms of nitrogen or other weight measures varies with animal length, larger Sagitta ingesting more material each day, but smaller Sagitta ingesting a larger fraction of their own body weight daily. Sagitta's predation has little impact on the prey populations, other than Oikopleura, which is the main food of larger Sagitta. Sagitta excretes ammonium and phosphate at rates roughly similar to other zooplankton of similar size. When feeding is prevented during excretion experiments, the specific excretion rates decrease rapidly with time, approaching those observed in laboratory-starved animals. Like other zooplankton, Sagitta has higher N/P ratios in its body tissue than its prey; its soluble excreta thus have a still lower ratio. Despite its abundance and dominance of macroplankton stock, Sagitta is only a minor contributor to nutrient regeneration in the southern basin, which is to be expected, based on its trophic position. The population's rates of growth and mortality were considerably higher than the net change in the stock during most periods analyzed. The instantaneous rates of birth and death are strongly correlated, suggesting a feedback mechanism regulating the population. The population incorporates carbon at about 1% of the rate of primary production in the basin. This is consistent with ecological efficiencies of 10% at each of the two steps froln producers to herbivores to Sagitta's position as the dominant primary carnivore among the plankton. Most of Sagitta's production is probably consumed by predators in the southern basin. The major predator may be nehu, a fish taken for tuna bait from this and other nearby environments. With the planned diversion of sewage from the basin, it is likely that both the stock and the dominance of Sagitta in the southern basin will decrease. / Thesis for the degree of Master of Science (University of Hawaii at Manoa). Typescript. Bibliography: leaves 140-147.

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