307 resultados para Asparagopsis armata
Resumo:
The conservation of birds and their habitats is essential to maintain well-functioning ecosystems including human-dominated habitats. In simplified or homogenized landscapes, patches of natural and semi-natural habitat are essential for the survival of plant and animal populations. We compared species composition and diversity of trees and birds between gallery forests, tree islands and hedges in a Colombian savanna landscape to assess how fragmented woody plant communities affect forest bird communities and how differences in habitat characteristics influenced bird species traits and their potential ecosystem function. Bird and tree diversity was higher in forests than in tree islands and hedges. Soil depth influenced woody species distribution, and canopy cover and tree height determined bird species distribution, resulting in plant and bird communities that mainly differed between forest and non-forest habitat. Bird and tree species and traits widely co-varied. Bird species in tree islands and hedges were on average smaller, less specialized to habitat and more tolerant to disturbance than in forest, but dietary differences did not emerge. Despite being less complex and diverse than forests, hedges and tree islands significantly contribute to the conservation of forest biodiversity in the savanna matrix. Forest fragments remain essential for the conservation of forest specialists, but hedges and tree islands facilitate spillover of more tolerant forest birds and their ecological functions such as seed dispersal from forest to the savanna matrix.
Resumo:
Radiolarians were observed at all five sites drilled during DSDP Leg 58. Three sites (442, 443, 444) are south of Japan in the Shikoku Basin. The remaining two sites (445, 446) are east of Okinawa, in the Daito Ridge and Basin areas. The observations made on radiolarians during Leg 58 are understood best by considering these two areas separately. The basement ages, preservation, diagenesis, and paleoecology are similar within each area, but different between the two areas. The radiolarian zones of Riedel and Sanfilippo (1978) were used to determine the sediment age. Because of the mixed nature of the fauna, there was an opportunity to test the tropical zonation in middlelatitude sediments. A middle- to high-latitude biostratigraphy for the Pliocene and Pleistocene has been formulated (Hays, 1970; Kling, 1973; Foreman, 1975), but there is no Miocene radiolarian zonation for these latitudes. The tropical elements of the present fauna are sufficient to use the low-latitude zonation, although there is a loss of resolution in the Pleistocene. Because of poor preservation, zone boundaries are indistinct in much of the cored sediment. Determination of abundance in any sample is always subjective and varies among investigators. This work was in its final stages at the publication of Westberg and Riedel (1978), and the guidelines outlined therein are not closely followed. The abundances recorded in Tables 1 through 5 are based on strewn slides which were searched entirely if an individual of a species was found, or for 8 to 10 minutes if the species was not found.
Resumo:
As age-diagnostic fossils are rare in the Middle to Upper Jurassic sedimentary succession of Gebel Maghara, North Sinai, Egypt, and in order to ensure maximal stratigraphic resolution, chronostratigraphic boundaries were determined based on quantitative biostratigraphy. A data matrix comprising 231 macrofaunal taxa in 93 samples from four sections has been processed with the Unitary Association (UA) Method. This led to construction of a sequence of 29 UAs (maximal sets of actually or virtually coexisting taxa), which have been grouped into 14 laterally reproducible association zones. The UA method allowed an in-depth analysis of the stratigraphically conflicting taxa, enabled the biostratigraphic subdivision of the studied interval, and also provided stratigraphic correlation among the measured sections and with the Tethyan ammonite zones.
Resumo:
A large population of the colonial pelagic tunicate Pyrosoma atlanticum occurred in April 1991 in offshore waters of the Ligurian Sea (Northwestern Mediterranean). The high numbers of colonies caught allowed their vertical distribution and diel migration in the 0-965 m water column to be described as a function of their size. Daytime depths and amplitudes of the migration were correlated with colony size. The amplitude of the migration ranged from 90 m for 3-mm-length colonies to 760 m for 51-mm-length colonies, with a mean amplitude of 410 m for the whole population, all sizes pooled. The results of horizontal hauls at a given depth around sunrise and sunset showed a marked diurnal symmetry of the migratory cycle relative to noon, and that migration of the population was not cohesive. For example, the larger the colonies, the later after sunset they reached the upper layers during their upward migration.