A Comparison of the Range and Movements of Acmaea digitalis Eschscholtz, Acmaea scutum Eschscholtz, Acmaea limatula Carpenter and Lottia gigantea Sowerby


Autoria(s): Haderlie, Eugene C.
Data(s)

1947

Resumo

Ten limpets (4 Acmaea digitalis , 4 Acmaea scutum, 1 Acmaea limatula, and 1 Lottia gigantea) were marked and their movements observed over a thirteen day period. Recordings of positions were made on a map, and the path of each was drawn on the map from day to day. Acmaea digitalis showed the greatest range, mostly in a vertical direction, and moved usually at night during high tide. Acmaea scutum showed a more limited range in a horizontal direction, and moved both day and night during high tide. Acmaea limatula had a horizontal range similar to A. scutum,, but exhibited no movement during the day time. Lottia gigantea had the most restricted range of any limpet studied, and moved only at night during high tide. This is a student paper done for a University of California Berkeley Zoology class. Since UCB didn't have its own marine lab at the time, it rented space at Hopkins Marine Station where this work was done. Gene Haderlie went on to earn his Ph.D. from Berkeley and later became a Professor at the Naval Post Graduate School in Monterey. (PDF contains 23 pages)

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/2870/1/1947_Haderlie_OCR.pdf

Haderlie, Eugene C. (1947) A Comparison of the Range and Movements of Acmaea digitalis Eschscholtz, Acmaea scutum Eschscholtz, Acmaea limatula Carpenter and Lottia gigantea Sowerby. Berkeley, CA, University of California, Berkeley, (Final Papers - University of California, Berkeley. Course: Zoology 112/212)

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

University of California, Berkeley

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/2870/

Palavras-Chave #Ecology #Biology
Tipo

Monograph or Serial Issue

NonPeerReviewed