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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

Nitrogen budget of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum in the western Gulf of Mexico /

Lee, Kun-seop, January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 114-124). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
2

The origin of nitrogen and phosphorus for growth of the marine angiosperm Thalassia testudinum König.

Patriquin, David Graham January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
3

The origin of nitrogen and phosphorus for growth of the marine angiosperm Thalassia testudinum König.

Patriquin, David Graham January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
4

Fonctionnement des réseaux trophiques des herbiers à thalassia testudinum en Guadeloupe (Petites Antilles) : apports des isotopes stables et des acides gras / Trophic web functioning of thalassia testudinum seagrass beds in Guadeloupe (Lesser Antilles) : using stable isotopes and fatty acids

Gautier, Françoise 05 September 2015 (has links)
Les Invertébrés de l’épifaune vagile présents dans les herbiers de Magnoliophytes marins ont un rôle essentiel dans le transfert d’énergie des producteurs primaires vers les niveaux trophiques supérieurs. L’objectif de ce travail a été d’analyser la relation entre la complexité de l’herbier et la structure des communautés de l’épifaune vagile, et d’étudier le rôle de ce compartiment dans le fonctionnement des réseaux trophiques des herbiers à Thalassia testudinum. Deux sites d’herbiers ont été comparés, l’un proche de la mangrove côtière et l’autre près de la barrière récifale, au cours de deux saisons. L’utilisation de différentes sources trophiques par les Invertébrés a été montrée en utilisant les méthodes des isotopes stables du carbone et de l’azote et de la composition en acides gras. L’herbier côtier, qui présente une structure complexe du fait de ses longues feuilles, de sa litière abondante et de sa forte charge en épiphytes, abrite une faune abondante et diversifiée de Crustacés. La préférence alimentaire de ces Invertébrés pour les micro-algues et les fines particules détritiques favorise la contribution du biofilm au réseau trophique de l’herbier côtier. L’herbier du large, moins complexe, abrite une communauté d’Invertébrés dominée par les Gastéropodes Cerithiidae. La limitation de la disponibilité en nourriture existant dans cet herbier explique la contribution plus élevée de la litière et des feuilles vivantes de Thalassia au réseau trophique par rapport à l’herbier côtier. Le couplage de l’analyse des isotopes stables à celle des contenus stomacaux réalisé sur les poissons a montré le rôle essentiel des Crevettes en tant que proies. L’herbier côtier, qui présente des ressources en nourriture plus abondantes et diversifiées, assure mieux son rôle de « nurserie » pour les juvéniles de poissons que l’herbier du large. / In seagrass beds, vagile epifauna plays a major role in the energy transfer from primary producers to higher trophic levels. The main aim of the work was to examine the relationship between the seagrass complexity and the vagile epifauna community structure, and to study the role of this compartment within the food web of Thalassia testudinum seagrass beds. Two seagrass sites were compared, one near the coastal mangrove and another one near the barrier reef, during two seasons. Trophic resources used by primary consumers were assessed by combining stable isotopes analysis and fatty acid compositions. The coastal seagrass bed is complex due to its long leaves and its great biomass of litter and epiphytes. It shelters a great abundance and diversity of Crustaceans. The feeding preference of them for micro-algae and detrital particles promotes biofilm contribution to food web of the coastal seagrass bed. The seagrass bed located seawards, lesser complex, harbors an Invertebrate community dominated by the Gastropods Cerithiidae. The reduced food availability in that seagrass bed explains the higher contribution of litter and Thalassia leaves to that food web compared to the coastal seagrass bed. By coupling stable isotopes and stomach contents analyses, it was possible to highlight the major role of shrimps in the feeding diet of fishes. The coastal seagrass bed, where the trophic resources are more abundant and diverse, better plays its role of nursery for juveniles fishes than the seaward seagrass bed.
5

Depositional Dynamics in Seagrass Systems of Tampa Bay, FL: Influence of Hydrodynamic Regime and Vegetation Density on Ecosystem Function

Meyers, Alison Cheryl 25 March 2010 (has links)
Many coastal ecosystems around the world are dominated by submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) habitats. These SAV habitats are known to provide many highly valuable ecosystem services such as habitat for commercial important species and increased water clarity. Water flow is an environmental variable which can have measurable effects on the ecosystem services provided by SAV, but is often not considered in studies assessing these services. This dissertation sought to investigate the links between SAV, primarily seagrasses, and hydrodynamics, paying special attention to the effects on sediments and fauna. Three main areas are discussed: (1) the effects of SAV on flow, (2) the effects of SAV and flow on deposition in SAV beds, and (3) the effects of SAV and flow on faunal communities in SAV beds. Seagrasses and other SAV reduce currents, attenuate waves, and dampen turbulence within their vegetative canopies, which in turn can enhance deposition and reduce the resuspension of sediment, organic matter, and passively settling larvae. The ability of SAV to retard flow may be further enhanced by increases in vegetated structure, such as shoot density, biomass, or canopy height, which can promote increased abundance and diversity of in- and epifauna within SAV beds. Ultimately, it is clear that hydrodynamics is an important factor that shapes SAV communities both physically (e.g. deposition, sediment structure, etc.) and biologically (e.g. faunal community composition, predation pressure, food availability, etc.).
6

Human-driven Benthic Jellyfish Blooms: Causes and Consequences for Coastal Marine Ecosystems

Stoner, Elizabeth W 10 June 2014 (has links)
Coastal marine ecosystems are among the most impacted globally, attributable to individual and cumulative effects of human disturbance. Anthropogenic nutrient loading is one stressor that commonly affects nearshore ecosystems, including seagrass beds, and has positive and negative effects on the structure and function of coastal systems. An additional, previously unexplored mechanistic pathway through which nutrients may indirectly influence nearshore systems is by driving blooms of benthic jellyfish. My dissertation research, conducted on Abaco Island, Bahamas, focused on elucidating the role that benthic jellyfish have in structuring systems in which they are common (i.e., seagrass beds), and explored mechanistic processes that may drive blooms of this taxa. To establish that human disturbances (e.g., elevated nutrient availability) may drive increased abundance and size of benthic jellyfish, Cassiopea spp., I conducted surveys in human-impacted and unimpacted coastal sites. Jellyfish were more abundant (and larger) from human-impacted areas, positively correlated to elevated nutrient availability. In order to elucidate mechanisms linking Cassiopea spp. with elevated nutrients, I evaluated whether zooxanthellae from Cassiopea were higher from human-disturbed systems, and whether Cassiopea exhibited increased size following nutrient input. I demonstrated that zooxanthellae population densities were elevated in human-impacted sites, and that nutrients led to positive jellyfish growth. As heightened densities of Cassiopea jellyfish may exert top-down and bottom-up controls on flora and fauna in impacted seagrass beds, I sought to examine ecological responses to Cassiopea. I evaluated whether there was a relationship between high Cassiopea densities and lower benthic fauna abundance and diversity in shallow seagrass beds. I found that Cassiopea have subtle effects on benthic fauna. However, through an experiment conducted in a seagrass bed in which nutrients and Cassiopea were added, I demonstrated that Cassiopea can result in seagrass habitat modification, with negative consequences for benthic fauna. My dissertation research demonstrates that increased human-driven benthic jellyfish densities may have indirect and direct effects on flora and fauna of coastal marine systems. This knowledge will advance our understanding of how human disturbances shift species interactions in coastal ecosystems, and will be critical for effective management of jellyfish blooms.
7

Heavy Metal Accumulation in Seagrasses in Southeastern Florida

Smith, Erin 11 June 2018 (has links)
Seagrass beds are among the most ecologically important systems in the marine environment. They provide the primary production to nearby coral reef and mangrove communities, and seagrasses comprise a large component of the diets of many marine organisms including fishes, small invertebrate species, and many protected species such as manatees and sea turtles. This consumption provides a pathway for many contaminants to enter the marine food web via the seagrasses. The coastal location of seagrass beds causes them to be especially susceptible to anthropogenic pollution, including accumulation of heavy metals, which has been shown to have many adverse health effects in the seagrasses and marine organisms that feed on them. This study assessed the heavy metal concentrations of seagrasses in three regional locations in South Florida: Port of Miami, Card Sound Aquatic Preserve, and Florida Bay. Three species of seagrasses, Thalassia testudinum, Halodule wrightii, and Syringodium filiforme, which comprise the majority of South Florida seagrass beds, were collected monthly for a period of one year and analyzed for ten heavy metals: (arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), iron (Fe), mercury (Hg), manganese (Mn), nickel (Ni), lead (Pb), selenium (Se), zinc (Zn)). Concentrations were compared across locations, season, species, and plant part (leaves, shoots, roots, and rhizomes). Concentration ranges, in µg/g (ppm), found in seagrass tissues for all included locations, species, and plant parts were: As (0.02-2.95), Cd (0.09-10.72), Cu (0.38-33.68), Fe (1.52-1877.43), Pb (0.78-156.20), Mn (0.79-300.15), Hg (0.03-16.46), Ni (0.67-87.74), Se (0.01-4.79), Zn (1.48-669.44). Statistical analysis showed significant difference in concentrations among locations, season, species, and plant morphology.
8

Characterization of a Karst Coastal Ecosystem in the Mexican Caribbean: Assessing the Influence of Coastal Hydrodynamics and Submerged Groundwater Discharges on Seagrass

Medina, Israel 2011 May 1900 (has links)
Bahia de la Ascension (BA) is a pristine, shallow, karst bay located in the Mexican Caribbean, a region experiencing rapid population growth stimulated by intense tourism development. The overall objective of this study was to address the natural hydrographic variability of this inherently vulnerable ecosystem and assess its influence on a key habitat, the seagrass. The chapters follow the three-branched nature of the study which tackled the connected ecosystem issues of coastal hydrology, physical dynamics of flow and circulation, and the ecological dynamics of the seagrass species Thalassia testudinum in BA. Freshwater input to BA is primarily by submerged groundwater discharges and surface runoff; both sources are derived from fissures in the aquifer but feature distinct water quality due to the interaction with adjacent wetlands. Hurricanes explain 36 percent of the interannual precipitation variability in the region. The water balance indicates a persistent net outflow from BA to the adjacent shelf, suggesting an intense exchange across inlets. Both diurnal and semidiurnal tidal frequencies are attenuated in the inner bay, where a meteorologically-induced subtidal water level increase may occur during four-day southeasterly winds. A clear SW-NE salinity gradient was established during dry and rainy seasons, with a strong tidally-driven marine influence throughout the central basin, and a perennial mesohaline ambient in the southwestern-most bay, where hydrodynamics are primarily controlled by wind stress. Thalassia testudinum is the dominant seagrass species in BA, occupying ~90 percent of the substrate, including the freshwater-influenced inner bay. High nutrient inputs, including phosphorus which might have limiting effects in karst environments, along with the wind-driven circulation controlling water residence times are associated with the successful development of T. testudinum (up to 1,461.23 g DW m-2) within the SW bay. Farthest into the central basin, Thalassia consistently exhibited an inverse correlation between abundance and density of shoots. This pattern was enhanced under exceptional precipitation and inputs of denuded organic matter resulting from hurricanes making landfall on this region. The relationship between nutrient distribution and the above/belowground ratio suggested that Thalassia growing in BA favors the development of the aerial component as nutrients availability increases. This study provides a basic understanding of the most important processes molding the patterns of variability exhibited by T. testudinum in Bahia de la Ascension. The salinity gradient and external nutrient supply, along with the hydrodynamic component, define the spatial scale at which the connectivity between the adjacent wetland, the bay, and the shelf may occur.
9

The Effects of Multiple Abiotic Stressors on the Susceptibility of the Seagrass Thalassia Testudinum to Labyrinthula sp., the Causative Agent of Wasting Disease

Bishop, Nichole Danielle 01 January 2013 (has links)
In the past century, seagrasses have experienced massive die off episodes in what has been collectively referred to as “wasting disease.” Researchers generally agree that wasting disease is caused by a protist of the Labyrinthula genus, and that environmental stressors can make some populations of seagrasses more susceptible to infection. The purpose of this study was to examine the combined effects of elevated salinity, elevated temperature, elevated sulfide and night-time hypoxia on Thalassia testudinum health and its response to Labyrinthula sp. infection under controlled conditions. To test these effects, microcosms were utilized and individual seagrass shoots were randomly assigned to treatment groups consisting of various combinations of abiotic stressors. They were then infected with Labyrinthula sp. and monitored for lesion formation and a reduction in photosynthetic efficiency. It was hypothesized that seagrasses incubated under the application of a given stressor would show evidence of declining health, and, in turn, would be more prone to infection, as quantified by lesion size and reduced photosynthetic capacity. Results indicated that abiotic stressors have little effect on T. testudium’s ability to resist infection from Labyrinthula sp. However, the Labyrinthula sp. was highly sensitive to abiotic stressors, specifically salinity, indicating that the health of the pathogen greatly contributed to the severity of the disease. Therefore, the stress thresholds of both the host seagrass and the pathogen need to be considered. Indeed, the interaction(s) among T. testudinum, Labyrinthula spp. and the environment are complex and not as linear as previously thought.
10

Using Principles of Seascape Ecology to Consider Relationships Between Spatial Patterning and Mobile Marine Vertebrates in a Seagrass-Mangrove Ecotone in Bimini, Bahamas

Driscoll, Sarah Rebecca Taylor 07 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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