Hyperiid amphipods (Crustacea : Peracarida) from a warm-core eddy in the Tasman Sea

1987 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 711 ◽  
Author(s):  
JW Young

Hyperiid amphipods were sampled from a warm-core eddy in the Tasman Sea in August, September and October 1979. Samples were taken at night to a depth of 400 m using a midwater trawl (RMT-8). In all, 22 798 hyperiids representing 38 species and 10 families were identified, adding 13 new records for eastern Australian waters. For each species, synoptic information is given on taxonomy, life history, vertical distribution, geographic range and associations with gelatinous zooplankton. Hyperiids were confined mainly to the upper 100 m of water at night. Evidence for a summer breeding season was found in three abundant species (Scina crassicornis, Primno johnsoni and Brachyscelus crusculum). Tropical hyperiid species may be transported into the Tasman Sea by the southward movement of eddies from their origin in the Coral Sea.

1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 609 ◽  
Author(s):  
FB Griffiths ◽  
SB Brandt

Decapod Crustacea were collected during five cruises (in August, September, and October 1979, February and May 1980) at sites inside, at the edge, and outside of warm-core eddy J. These sampling sites were considered to have come from different domains of the Tasman Sea water mass. All 146 samples in this time series were taken in the upper 500 m at night using horizontal tows with an RMT 8. A total of 21 494 individuals belonging to 41 species and five larval categories was found. Nine of the 18 abundant species were cosmopolitan species: typical of samples from outside, at the edge of, and inside eddy J. Oplophorus spinosus was typical only at the eddy edge. Four species were typical of the outside and edge domains, and another four were typical of the inside and edge domains. Species abundances outside the eddy were dominated by Sergia prehensilis, Gennadas gilchristi, and Acanthephyra quadrispinosa. The first two species, plus Systellaspis debilis, were dominant at the eddy edge. Six species (Systellaspis debilis, Sergia prehensilis, Sergia scintillans, Sergia splendens, Sergestes atlanticus, and Parapandalas cf. richardi) were dominant at various times inside the eddy. There were no significant differences in the abundance of Sergia prehensilis in the three domains. Systellaspis debilis was significantly more abundant inside and at the eddy edge than outside the eddy, and Gennadas gilchristi was significantly more abundant outside and at the eddy edge than inside the eddy. An analysis of the community changes with time showed that the outside communities remained very similar in spite of the 5°30' change in latitude of eddy J between August 1979 and May 1980. In contrast, the inside communities were quite dissimilar between months, and there was no trend in this pattern. The edge communities were very similar except in May, when a large increase in the abundance of Gennadas gilchristi was found. Comparisons of communities between domains within each month showed the outside and edge communities were very similar over the entire period. In contrast, the outside and inside communities became increasingly different in time, mainly caused by changes in the abundances of species inside the eddy. The inside and edge communities were also quite different, but no consistent pattern in their dissimilarity with time was seen. Differences in the size-frequency distributions of Sergla prehensilis and Systellaspis debilis between domains through time suggest that breeding and recruitment were occumng at different times inside and outside the eddy. There was little evidence for colonization of the eddy by Tasman Sea species. We conclude that a secondary succession has been initiated, probably in response to the different physical and biological environments present inside eddy J as compared with the surrounding Tasman Sea.


Zootaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4514 (2) ◽  
pp. 243 ◽  
Author(s):  
GÜLHAN ŞAHİN ◽  
HASAN HÜSEYİN ÖZBEK

This paper reports on mites of the family Pachylaelapidae collected in Bayburt Province, Turkey, during 2013–2015. Nine species were recorded in the genera Pachyseius, Olopachys, Pachylaelaps, and Onchodellus. Pachylaelaps (Longipachylaelaps) bayburtensis sp. nov., Onchodellus turcicus sp. nov. and O. montanus sp. nov. are described to new, and Pachylaelaps (Longipachylaelaps) vicarus is a new record for the Turkish mite fauna. New records extend the geographic range of Pachyseius masani, Olopachys hallidayi, and O. elongatus in Turkey. 


1983 ◽  
Vol 115 (10) ◽  
pp. 1329-1354 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. W. Betz

AbstractTrichadenotecnum alexanderae Sommerman is shown to represent one biparental (= euphrasic) species capable of facultative parthenogenesis (thelytoky) and three uniparental (= obligatorily parthenogenetic) sibling species, as determined by tests for mating, life history observations, and morphological analysis of specimens over the geographic range of the species complex. The name T. alexanderae is restricted to the biparental species because the holotype is a male. The three uniparental species are here named and described as T. castum n. sp., T. merum n. sp., and T. innuptum n. sp. The female of T. alexanderae is redescribed to allow its separation from the three uniparental species. A key to females of the species complex is supplied. All three uniparental species were derived from the biparental ancestor of T. alexanderae. Most collections of populations represented only by females consist of one or more uniparental species. Facultative parthenogenesis is shown to maintain a population of T. alexanderae through one generation only. The biparental species is found not to be restricted geographically to a relictual or peripheral range within the species complex, but to occupy a rather wide, north-temperate distribution across eastern North America.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-220
Author(s):  
Fermín Del Egido ◽  
Patricio Bariego ◽  
Alberto Rodríguez ◽  
María Santos Vicente

We provide new records and notes on 25 protected and/or threatened vascular plant species in Castilla y León. Some of them illustrate not only new findings but also an interesting expansion of their geographic range. Eight taxa are reported for the first time in some provinces, while eleven of them were two or three times previously reported.


Check List ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-73
Author(s):  
Gustavo Crizel Gomes ◽  
Thales Castilhos de Freitas ◽  
Henrique Noguez da Cunha ◽  
Fernando Jacobs ◽  
Michele Spenst Wall

We describe new records of Trichothraupis melanops in five municipalities of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The birds were detected in sporadic expeditions in the Serra do Sudeste and Campanha Gaúcha regions by direct visualization and vocal recognition. One of these records, next to the border with Uruguay, is the southernmost known location for the species in Brazil. This record expands the geographic range of the species in Brazil south by 170 km. We believe that these occurrences are seasonal displacements and do not represent a colonization front with resident populations.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. e16312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Dunstan ◽  
Peter D. Ward ◽  
N. Justin Marshall

Author(s):  
J. E. Morton

The Plymouth Fauna List contains records of two genera of pteropods, Limacina and Clione. Of the first, Limacina retroversa (Flem.) is by far the better-known species, apparently occurring regularly at Plymouth in large numbers in townettings from outside, and sometimes inside, the Sound. It breeds at Plymouth from June to August, and Lebour (1932) has given a detailed account of its breeding and larval stages and has discussed its role in the plankton. The second species of Limacina at Plymouth is lesueuri (d'Orbigny), which has been observed from time to time since 1906, when it was very common. The last record in the Fauna is off the Breakwater in 1920. Of the gymnosomatous pteropods, Clione limacina Phipps is the only species regularly occurring. Lebour (1931) has described the life history of this form, and mentions February to August as its months of greatest abundance. Its breeding season is June to August. Another gymnosome, tentatively referred to as Clionina longicauda, is reported by Russell (1936), and from the specimen department at Plymouth Laboratory the writer obtained some preserved specimens, not easily identifiable, of a Pneumodermopsis taken locally; its species is perhaps ciliata, recorded by Massy (1917) from the Irish Coast.


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