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INTRODUCCIÓN

De acuerdo a los principales objetivos de la biblioteca “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso Muñoz”, Unidad Académica Mazatlán del ICML, U.N.A.M. de apoyar la investigación y docencia a

nivel regional y nacional en las áreas de ciencias del mar y limnología el poner a disposición de todos lo usuarios la información del acervo de la Biblioteca, se ha visto la necesidad de dar mayor difusión a nuestro acervo a través de la elaboración del Boletín

Electrónico de Material Reciente de la Biblioteca.

Este boletín pretende dar la información del acervo de reciente ingreso, ya sea por compra, donación y/o canje, a través de la referencia bibliográfica y tabla de contenido en forma más eficiente, ya que este formato de documento nos permite además realizar búsquedas

dentro del mismo boletín (botón arriba, FIND). Asimismo del lado izquierdo de la referencia bibliográfica podemos dar un clic y nos lleva directamente a la tabla de

contenido de esta.

Estamos seguros que teniendo este boletín en forma electrónica, el cual se enviara por correo electrónico a las instituciones a nivel nacional, será colocado en nuestra pagina web

de la biblioteca: http://ola.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio para que a través de internet, todos los usuarios puedan consultarlo y buscar en él los temas de su interés. De esta forma la difusión

de nuestro acervo ira en constante aumento.

Para cualquier consulta, dudas o comentarios, favor de enviarnos un correo a la cuenta de [email protected], donde con mucho gusto atenderemos su solicitud. Estamos en la mejor disposición de enviar a todo usuario que solicite esta información a las cuentas de

correo respectivas.

Se les recuerda que nuestra biblioteca tiene los catálogos de libros, tesis, revistas, memorias, informes y de reimpresos en nuestra página web.

Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.

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PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS

AQUATIC ECOLOGY: Vol. 39, No. 2, 2005.

AVICENNIA. Revista de Biodiversidad Tropical: No. 17, 2004.

BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE: Vol. 205, No. 3, December 2003. Vol. 208, No. 3, June 2005.

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 74, No. 4, April 2005. Vol. 74, No. 5, May 2005.

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 76, No. 3, May 2005.

CIENCIAS MARINAS: Vol. 31, No. 1B, mayo de 2005.

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN: No. 06/05, June 2005.

CÓMO VES?: No. 80, agosto 20 de 2005.

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY: Vol. 19, No. 3, June 2005.

CRUSTACEANA: Vol. 78, Part. 3, March 2005.

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY: Vol. 47, No. 1, December 2004. Vol. 47, No. 3, February 2005. Vol. 47, No. 5, March 2005. Vol. 47, No. 6, April 2005. Vol. 47, No. 7, May 2005.

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 137, No. 1, September 2005.

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 24, No. 7, July 2005.

ESTUARIES: Vol. 28, No. 2, April 2005.

FAO CIRCULAR DE PESCA: No. 1001, 2005: Perspectivas de la acuicultura mundial en los próximos decenios: Análisis de los pronósticos para 2030 de la producción acuícola de los principales países.

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 473, 2005: Causes of detentions and rejections in international fish trade.

FARO EL: No. 52, julio 7 de 2005.

FISHERY BULLETIN: Vol. 103, No. 2, April 2005.

FORMACIÓN AMBIENTAL: Vol. 17, No. 36, enero-junio de 2005.

GACETA UNAM: No. 3,821, 30 de junio de 2005.

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No. 3,822, 4 de julio de 2005.

GEOS: Boletín de la Unión Geofísica Mexicana, A.C.: Vol. 24, No. 3, diciembre de 2004.

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 32, No. 7, July 2005.

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY: Vol. 25, No. 2, May 2005.

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH: Vol. 27, No. 5, May 2005.

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 54, No. 1, July 2005.

JOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY: Vol. 36, No. 2, 2005.

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 293, 2005. Vol. 294, 2005.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON: Vol. 118, No. 2, 29 June 2005.

SCIENTIA MARINA: Vol. 69, No. 2, June 2005.

SENCKENBERGIANA MARÍTIMA: Vol. 35, No. 1, March 2005.

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT: Vol. 13, No. 2, April 2005.

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA: Vol. 34, No. 4, July 2005.

REIMPRESOS

RUELAS-INZUNZA, J. AND F. PÁEZ-OSUNA, 2005. Mercury in fish and shark tissues

from two coastal lagoons in the Gulf of California, México. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol., Vol. 74(2): 294-300.

RUELAS-INZUNZA, J. , F. PÁEZ-OSUNA AND LUIS A. SOTO, 2005. Bioaccumulation of Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn in trophosome and vestimentum of the tube worm Riftia pachyptila from Guaymas basin, Gulf of California. Deep-Sea Research I, Vol. 52: 1319-1323.

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PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS AQUATIC ECOLOGY Volume 39, Number 2 June 2005 In Memoriam: Professor Robert G. Wetzel............................................................................................... 121 Ramesh D. Gulati Elemental composition of Microcystis aeruginosa under conditions of lake nutrient depletion................ 123 V. Krivtsov, E.G. Bellinger, D.C. Sigee Phytoplankton production, biomass and community structure following a summer nutrient pulse in Chesapeake Bay....................................................................................................................................... 135 Christina L.J. Yeager, Lawrence W. Harding, Michael E. Mallonee Assignment of Lemna gibba L. (duckweed) bioassay for in situ ecotoxicity assessment ........................ 151 Martin Mkandawire and E. Gert Dudel Seasonal dynamic of phototrophic epibionts on crustacean zooplankton in a eutrophic reservoir with cyanobacterial bloom ................................................................................................................................ 167 Olga P. Dubovskaya, Elena P. Klimova, Vladimir I. Kolmakov, et al. An in situ method for the investigation of vertical distributions of zooplankton in lakes: test of a two-compartment enclosure ............................................................................................................................ 181 Alexander P. Tolomeyev and Yegor S. Zadereev Stable isotope analysis of aquatic invertebrate communities in irrigated rice fields cultivated under different management regimes ................................................................................................................. 189 A. L. Wilson, D.S. Ryder, R.J. Watts, et al. Responses of growth and phlorotannins in Fucus vesiculosus to nutrient enrichment and herbivory..... 201 Anne Hemmi, Anita Mäkinen, Veijo Jormalainen, et al. The reproductive biology of Nassarius festivus (Powys, 1835) (Gastropoda: Nassariidae) in relation to seasonal changes in temperature and salinity in subtropical Hong Kong ............................................ 213 K. Chan and Brian Morton Ontogenetic microhabitat shifts in Sacramento pikeminnow, Ptychocheilus grandis: reducing intraspecific predation ............................................................................................................................... 229 Mark F. Gard Review article Water pumping and analysis of flow in burrowing zoobenthos: an overview ........................................... 237 Hans Ulrik Riisgård and Poul S. Larsen BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN THE December 1 2003, Volume 205, Issue 3 Physiology and Biomechanics: Tatsuo Motokawa and Akifumi Tsuchi Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Body-Wall Dermis in Various Mechanical States and Their Implications for the Behavior of Sea Cucumbers............................................................................ : 261-275. Lars Tomanek and Eric Sanford Heat-Shock Protein 70 (Hsp70) as a Biochemical Stress Indicator: an Experimental Field Test in Two Congeneric Intertidal Gastropods (Genus: Tegula) ................................................................ : 276-284. Development and Reproduction: Maria Byrne, Michael W. Hart, Anna Cerra, and Paula Cisternas Reproduction and Larval Morphology of Broadcasting and Viviparous Species in the Cryptasterina Species Complex ............................................................................................................................ : 285-294. Bruno Pernet Persistent Ancestral Feeding Structures in Nonfeeding Annelid Larvae........................................ : 295-307. Carolyn J. Ruddell, Geoffrey Wainwright, Audrey Geffen, Michael R. H. White, Simon G. Webster, and Huw H. Rees Cloning, Characterization, and Developmental Expression of a Putative Farnesoic Acid O-Methyl Transferase in the Female Edible Crab Cancer pagurus ............................................................... : 308-318. Howard R. Lasker, Michael L. Boller, John Castanaro, and Juan Armando Sánchez Determinate Growth and Modularity in a Gorgonian Octocoral...................................................... : 319-330. Symbiosis and Parasitology:

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Joanna L. Joyner, Suzanne M. Peyer, and Raymond W. Lee Possible Roles of Sulfur-Containing Amino Acids in a Chemoautotrophic Bacterium-Mollusc Symbiosis........................................................................................................................................ : 331-338. J. A. Schwarz and V. M. Weis Localization of a Symbiosis-Related Protein, Sym32, in the Anthopleura elegantissima–Symbiodinium muscatinei Association............................................................................................ : 339-350. Ecology and Evolution: Rebecca M. Price Columellar Muscle of Neogastropods: Muscle Attachment and the Function of Columellar Folds : 351-366. Kinsey Frick Response in Nematocyst Uptake by the Nudibranch Flabellina verrucosa to the Presence of Various Predators in the Southern Gulf of Maine ........................................................................... : 367-376. BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN THE Contents: June 1 2005, Volume 208, Issue 3 Research Note: Matthew L. Nicotra and Leo W. Buss A Test for Larval Kin Aggregations ................................................................................................. : 157-158. Innate Immunity: Joseph E. Burgents, Karen G. Burnett, and Louis E. Burnett Effects of Hypoxia and Hypercapnic Hypoxia on the Localization and the Elimination of Vibrio campbellii in Litopenaeus vannamei, the Pacific White Shrimp ..................................................... : 159-168. Neurobiology and Behavior: Stephen C. Kempf and Louise R. Page Anti-Tubulin Labeling Reveals Ampullary Neuron Ciliary Bundles in Opisthobranch Larvae and a New Putative Neural Structure Associated With the Apical Ganglion ............................................ : 169-182. Adrian McMahon, Blair W. Patullo, and David L. Macmillan Exploration in a T-Maze by the Crayfish Cherax destructor Suggests Bilateral Comparison of Antennal Tactile Information ........................................................................................................... : 183-188. Development and Reproduction: John A. Freeman Cell Differentiation Is a Primary Growth Process in Developing Limbs of Artemia ........................ : 189-199. Symbiosis and Parasitology: Suzanne C. Dufour Gill Anatomy and the Evolution of Symbiosis in the Bivalve Family Thyasiridae ........................... : 200-212. Ecology and Evolution: Adriene B. Burnette, Torsten H. Struck, and Kenneth M. Halanych Holopelagic Poeobius meseres ("Poeobiidae," Annelida) Is Derived From Benthic Flabelligerid Worms............................................................................................................................................. : 213-220. Systematics: Allen G. Collins and Marymegan Daly A New Deepwater Species of Stauromedusae, Lucernaria janetae (Cnidaria, Staurozoa, Lucernariidae), and a Preliminary Investigation of Stauromedusan Phylogeny Based on Nuclear and Mitochondrial rDNA Data ................................................................................................................ : 221-230. BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY Vol. 74 No.4 April 2005. Spatial distribution of oganoclorine pesticide residues in soils surrounding guanting reservoir, people´s republic of China by W. Tieyu, L. Yonglong, S. Yajuan, Z. Hong............................................. 623 Agricultural pesticides in Groundwater of kanchana buri, ratcha buri and suphan buri provinces, Thailand by P.F. Hudak, A. Thapinta........................................................................................................ 631 Bioaccumulation of endosulfan from contaminanted sediment by Vallisneria spiralis by W. Di Marzio, E. Saenz, J. Alberdi, M. Tortorelli, P. Nannini, G. Ambrini........................................................... 637 Persistence of profenofos residue on tea under Northeast Indian climatic conditions by S. K. Pramanik, S. Dutta, J. Bhattachayya, T. Saha, P.K. Dey, S. Das, A. Bhattachayya................................ 645

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Distribution patterns of hexachlorocyclohexanes and other organoclorine compounds in muscles of fish from a Japanese remote lake during 2002-2003 by Takazawa, K. Kitamura, M. Yoshikane, Y. Shibata, M. Morita, A. Tanaka .................................................................................................................. 652 Seasonal variation and spatial distribution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in atmospheric PM10 of Bejing, people´s Republic of China by J.B. Zhou, T. G. Wang, Y. B. Huang, T. Mao, N.N. Zhong ........................................................................................................................................................ 660 Evaluation of fentrazamide for weed control and estimation of its residues in rice by I. Mukherjee, M. Gopal......................................................................................................................................................... 667 Residual levels and bioaccumulation of chlorinated persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in vegetables from suburb of nanjing, people´s Republic of China by H. J. Gao, X. Jiang, F. Wang, D.Z. Wang, Y. R. Bian............................................................................................................................... 663 Environmental load of nitrogen and phosphorus from extensive, semiintensive, and intensive shrimp farms in the Gulf of California ecoregion By Paéz-Osuna, A.C. Ruiz-Fernández .................................... 681 Followup study of mercury pollution in indigenus tribe reservations in the province of Ontario, Canada, 1975-2002 by harada, T. Fijino, T. Oorui, S. Nakachi, T. Nou, T. Kizaki, Y. Hitomi, N. Nakano, H. Ohno ...................................................................................................................................... 689 Bioaccumulation of cooper, iron, and zinc by Pinus halepensis (Miller) by F. rebodero, A. L. Fernando, J. F. S. Oliveira ........................................................................................................................ 698 Removal of copper (VI) from aqueous solution by Ag/TiO2 photocatalysis by S. X. Liu.......................... 706 Nickel phytoremediation potential of broad of broad bean, vicia faba L. , and its biochemical responses by S. Srivastava , S. Mishra, S. Dwivedi, V. S. Baghel, S. Verna, P. K. Tandon, U.N. Rai. R.D. Tripathi .............................................................................................................................................. 715 Inmobilization of heavy metals in contaminated soil using nonhumus-humus soil and hydroxyapatite by V. Misra, S. D. Pandey......................................................................................................................... 725 Application of various methods for assessment of background arsenic concentration in farming soil by loska, D. Wiechula, I. Korus, J. Pelczar ............................................................................................... 732 Cooper in livestock from a polluted area by M. Skalická, B. Koréneková, P. Nad´ .................................. 740 Possible involvement of oxidative stress in cooper induced inhibition of nitrate reductase activity in vallisneria spiralis L. by P. Vajpayee, U. N. Rai, M. B. Ali, R. D. Tripathi, A. Kumar, S. N. Singh ........... 749 Cytochrome B gene partial sequence and RAPD analysis Daphnia longispina lineages differering in their resistance to copper by N. Martins, I. Lopes, A. Brehm, R. Ribeiro 755 Lack of evidence for metallothionein role in tolerance to copper by natural populations of Daphnia longispina by N. Martins, I. Lopes, L. Guilhermino, M. J. Bebianno, R. Ribeiro....................................... 761 Toxicity of pendimethalin to nontarget soil organisms by J. B. Belden, T. A. Phillips, B. W. Clark, J.R. Coats ................................................................................................................................................. 769 Modulatory effect of cadmium injection on endosulfan-induced oxidative stress in the freshwater fish, channa punctata bloch by Fatif, M. Ali, M. Kaur, H. Rehman, S. Raisuddin..................................... 777 Gill modifications in the freshwater fish cyprinus carpio after subchronic exposure to simazine by A. L. Oropesa-Jiménez, J. P. García- Cambero, L. Gómez-Gordo, V. Roncero-Cordero, F. Soler- Rodríguez.................................................................................................................................................. 785 Toxicity testing with embryos of marine mussels: protocol standarization for perna perna (Linnaeus, 1758) by L. P. Zaroni, D. M. S. Abessa, G. R. Lotufo, E. C. P. M. Sousa, Y. A. Pinto............................. 793 Application of microbiotesis and activated sludge respirometry for the evaluation of industrial wastewater toxicity by A. Kungolos .......................................................................................................... 801 BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY Vol. 74 No.5 May 2005. Determination of Urinary Metabolites of Phosalone, Methidathion, and mp after Oral Administration and Dermal Application to Rats by K. J. Min, C. G. Cha, VV.Popendorl.................................................. 809 Association Between Lifetime Cadmium Intake and Cadmium Concentration in Individual Urine by E. Kobayashi, Y. Suwazono, M. Uetani, T.Inaba, M. Oishi, T. Kido, H. Nakagawa, K. Nogawa ............. 817 Comparative Toxicity of Pokeweed (Phytolacca americana) Extracts to Invasive Snails (Viviparus georgianis) and Fathead Minnows (Pimephales promelas) and the Implications for Aquaculture by M. Aldea, S. Allen-Gil ................................................................................................. 822 Acute and Chronic Toxicity Test Methods for Nematostella vectensis Stephenson by V. L. Harter, R. A. Matthews .............................................................................................................................................. 830

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Effect of Cadmium on Fin Regeneration in the Freshwater Fish, Oreochromis mossambicus by Y. Venna........................................................................................................................................................ 837 Behavioral Responses of Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss to Sublethal Toxicity of a Model Mixture of Heavy Metals by G. Svecevicius.............................................................................................. 845 Estrogenic Activity of Treated Municipal Eft1uent from Seven Sewage Treatment Plants in Victoria, Australia by C. Mispagel, F. Shiraishi, M. Allinson, G. Allinson................................................................ 853 Metal Accumulation and Ecophysiological Effects of DistiUery Eft1uent on Potamogeton pectinatus L. by N. K. Singh, G. C. Pandey, U. N. Rai, R. D. Tripathi, H. B. Singh, D. K. Gupta ............ 857 Residues and Toxicity of Esfenvalerate and Permethrin in Water and Sediment, in Tributaries of the Sacramento and San Joaquín Rivers, California, USA by J. Bacey, F. Spurlock, K. Stamer, H. Feng, J. Hsu, J. VVhite, D. M. Tran .................................................................................................................... 864 Acute Toxicity of Imidacloprid and Fipronil to a Nontarget Aquatic Insect, Simulium vittatum Zetterstedt cytospecies 18-7 by J. P. Ovennyer, B. N. Mason, K. L. Armbrust........................................ 872 Acute Toxicity of Alpha-Cypermethrin on Tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus L.) Larvae by M. Yilmaz.............................................................................................................................................. 880 pH Dependent Toxicity of Pyridine Raffinate to a Common Duckweed, Lemna minor L. by R. Chandra, B. B. Singh....................................................................................................................... 886 Bromate Residues in Some Popular Baked Products in Relation to the Sustained Antibromate Campaign in Nigeria by N. P. Okolie, M. E. Ukun, E. O. Onyema ........................................................... 894 Dioxin Formation During Combustion of Nonchloride Plastic, Polystyrene and Its Product by A. Yasuhara, T. Katami, T. Shibamoto ................................................................................................ 899 Treatment Train for Site Remediation at a Petrochemicals-Contaminated Site Within a Petroleum Refinery by G. C. C. Yang, L. C. Wu, c. S. Wu, I. Y. Hsu......................................................................... 904 Accidental Discharge of Brodifacoum Baits in a Tidal Marine Environment: A Case Study by T. Primus, G. Wright, P. Fisher ............................................................................................................ 913 Pesticide Residues in Suñace Water from Irrigation-Season Monitoring in the San Joaquin Valley, California, USA by K. Starner, F. Spurlock, S. GiIl, K. Goh, H. Feng, J. Hsu, P. Lee, D. Tran, J. White ..................................................................................................................................................... 920 Distribution, Fate, and Effects of 14C_DDT in Model Ecosystems Simulating Tropical Kenyan Freshwater Environments by S. O. Wandiga, B. T. Yebiyo, J. O. Lalah, G. N. Kamau ........................... 928 Distribution of Organochlorine Pesticides in Urban Soil from Beijing, People's Republic of China by X. H. Li, L. L. Ma, X. F. Liu, S. Fu, H. X. Cheng, X. B. Xu......................................................... 938 Polycyclic Aromatic Jlydrocarbon Pollution in Sediments of the «;anakkale (Dardanelles) Strait, Turkey by S. Unlü, B. Alpar ............................................................................................................ 946 Concentration and Distribution of Several Pesticides Applied to Paddy Fields in Water and Sediment, from Sugao Marsh, Japan by T. Kawakami, M. Ishizaka, Y. Ishii, H. Eun, J. Miyazaki,K. Tamura, T. Higashi ................................................................................................................................... 954 Distribution of Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Different Deptbs of Soil from a Polluted Area in the People's Republic of China by L. Gao, X. Zhao, M. Zheng, B. Zhang, W. Liu ......................................... 962 Mercury Contamination in Mushroom Samples from Tokat, Turkey by M. Tuzen, M. Soylak ................. 968 Mercury in an Assortment of Processed and Unprocessed Seafood Samples by K. E. Levine, M. A. Levine, F. X. Weber, J. P. Henderson, P. M. Grohse............................................................................... 973 Methylmercury and Total Mercury in Sediments Collected from the East China Sea by J.-B. Shi, L.-N. Liang, c.-G. Yuan, B. He, G.-B. Jiang .................................................................................................. 980 Distribution and Concentration of Trace Metals in Tissues of Different Fish Species from the Atlantic Coast of Western Africa by Z. Sidoumou, M. Gnassia-Barelli, Y. Siau, V. Morton, M. Roméo................ 988 Heavy Metals in the Oyster Crassostreil corteziensis from Urias Lagoon, Mazatlán, Mexico, Associated with Different Anthropogenic Discharges by M. G. Frías-Espericueta, J. I. Osuna-López, S. Flores-Reyes, G. López-López, G. Izaguirre-Fierro ............................................................................. 996 Lead, Cadmium, Copper, Manganese, and Zinc in Wetland Waters of Victoria Lake Basin, East Africa by J. T. Nyangababo, L. Henry, E. Omutange 1003 BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE VOL. 76, NO. 3 MAY 2005. Samuel Curry Snedaker (1938–2005) ...........................................................................................623-624(2) Biotic Neighborhoods of Shallow-Water Gorgonians of Puerto Rico...........................................625-636(12) Author: Yoshioka, Paul M.

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The Development of the Decapod Assemblage at a Steel-Slag Disposal Site with Disturbance from a Typhoon in Taiwan....................................................................................................................637-646(10) Authors: Chou, Wei-Rung; Fang, Lee-Shing Improving Selectivity in an Australian Penaeid Stow-net Fishery................................................647-660(14) Authors: Macbeth, William G.; Broadhurst, Matt K.; Millar, Russell B. A Review of Eastern Pacific Species of the Genus Eugerres (Perciformes: Gerreidae) ............661-674(14) Authors: González-Acosta, Adrián F.; De La Cruz-Agüero, José; Castro-Aguirre, José Luis A Molecular Genetic Evaluation of the Taxonomy of Eels of the Genus Anguilla (Pisces: Anguilliformes) .............................................................................................................................675-690(16) Authors: Watanabe, Shun; Aoyama, Jun; Nishida, Mutsumi; Tsukamoto, Katsumi Phylogeny of Sea Hares in the Aplysia Clade Based on Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Data......691-698(8) Authors: Medina, Mónica; Collins, Timothy; Walsh, Patrick J. Marrus Claudanielis, a New Species of Deep-sea Physonect Siphonophore (Siphonophora, Physonectae) ...............................................................................................................................699-714(16) Authors: Dunn, Casey W.; Pugh, Philip R.; Haddock, Steven H.D. Localization of Reef Sounds by Settlement-Stage Larvae of Coral-Reef Fishes (Pomacentridae)715-724(10) Authors: Leis, Jeffrey M.; Lockett, Matthew M. Ecology and Zoogeography of Deep-Reef Fishes in Northeastern Brazil ...................................725-742(18) Authors: Feitoza, Bertran M.; Rosa, Ricardo S.; Rocha, Luiz A. Overlap in Diet Between Co-Occurring Active Suspension Feeders on Tropical and Temperate Reefs..............................................................................................................................................743-750(8) Author: Pile, Adele J. Reviews..........................................................................................................................................751-754(4) CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN June 2005 July 15, 2005 TROPICS Editor's Notes Highlights Table of Atmospheric Indices Table T1 Table of SST Indices Table T2 Time Series Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies OLR Anomalies T1 Equatorial SOI T2 200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies 500-mb Temperature Anomalies 30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3 850-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T4 Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5 Time-Longitude Sections Mean and Anomalous Sea Level Pressure T6 Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal Wind T7 Mean and Anomalous OLR T8 Mean and Anomalous SST T9 Pentad SLP Anomalies T10 Pentad OLR Anomalies T11 Pentad 250-mb Velocity Potential Anomalies T12 Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind AnomaliesT 13 Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind T14 Anomalous and Mean Depth of the 20C Isotherm T15 Mean & Anomaly Fields Depth of the 20C Isotherm T16 Subsurface Equatorial Pacific

Temperatures T17 Tropical Strip SST T18 SLP T19 850-mb Vector Wind T20 200-mb Vector Wind T21 200-mb Streamfunction T22 200-mb Divergence T23 200-mb Velocity Potential and Divergent Wind T24 OLR T25 SSM/I Satellite Tropical Precipitation Estimates T26 Cloud Liquid Water T27 Precipitable Water T28 Mean and Anomalous RH and Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector) T29 Mean and Anomalous RH and Divergent Circulation (Atlantic sector) T30 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (Western Pacific sector) T31 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (Eastern Pacific sector) T32 Appendix 1: Outside Contributions Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1 Thermistor Chain Data A1.2 TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitude Section Mean A1.3

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TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitude Section Anomalies A1.4 East Pacific SST and Sea Level A1.5 Pacific Wind Stress and Anomalies A1.6 Satellite-Derived Surface Currents - Pacific A1.7 Satellite-Derived Surface Currents - Atlantic/Indian A1.8 FORECAST FORUM Discussion Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts Canonical Correlation Analysis SST anomaly prediction F1 Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast F2 NCEP Coupled Model Forecasts Forecast SST ANOMALY F3 Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b NCEP Markov Model Forecasts Forecast SST Anomalies F5 Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6 LDEO Forecast Forecast of SST and Wind Stress F7 Forecast of Nino 3 SSTA F8 Linear Inverse Modeling Forecasts Predicted SST Anomalies F9 Forecasts of NINO 3 Anomalies F10 Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Model (HMC-3) F11 ENSO-CLIPER Model Forecast F12 IRI Niño 3.4 Summary F13 EXTRATROPICS Highlights Table of Teleconnection Indices - Table E1 Surface Temperature - Anomalies and Percentiles E1 Monthly Temperature Time Series E2

Surface Precipitation (CAMSOPI)- Anomaly and Percentiles E3 Time Series of Selected Global Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI) E4 Time Series of U. S. Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI) E5 U. S. Precipitation E6 Northern Hemisphere Standardized Monthly Amplitudes of Selected Teleconnection Indices E7 Mean and Anomalous SLP E8 Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E9 Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E10 500-mb Persistence E11 Time -Longitude Sections of 500-mb Height Anomalies E12 700-mb Storm Track E13 Southern Hemisphere Troposphere Mean and Anomalous SLP E14 Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E15 Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E16 500-mb Persistence E17 Time -Longitude Sections of 500-mb Height Anomalies E18 Stratosphere Height Anomalies at selected levels S1 Height-longitude section S2 50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3 2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies S4 Total Ozone Anomalies (Time Series) S5 Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map) S6 Daily vertical component of EP flux S7 Appendix 2: Additional Figures Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa Anomalies A2.1

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY Vol. 19 no.3, June 2005 Spotlight on Brazil ..................................................................................................................................... 587 Thomas E. Lovejoy Conservation Education The Neighborhood Nestwatch Program: Participant Outcomes of a Citizen-Science Ecological Research Project ...................................................................................................................................... 589 Celia Evans, Eleanor Abrams, Robert Reitsma, Karin Roux, Laura Salmonsen, Peter P. Marra Special Section: Brazilian Conservation: Challenges and Opportunities Special Section: Brazilian Conservation: Challenges and Opportunities Katrina Brandon, Gustavo A. B. da Fonseca, Anthony B. Rylands, José Maria Cardoso da Silva.......... 595 A Brief History of Biodiversity Conservation in Brazil ............................................................................... 601 RUSSELL A. MITTERMEIER, GUSTAVO A.B. DA FONSECA, ANTHONY B. RYLANDS, KATRINA BRANDON The Brazilian Protected Areas Program ................................................................................................... 608 MARINA SILVA Brazilian Protected Areas ......................................................................................................................... 612 ANTHONY B. RYLANDS, KATRINA BRANDON

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How Many Species Are There in Brazil? .................................................................................................. 619 THOMAS M. LEWINSOHN, PAULO INÁCIO PRADO Conservation of Marine and Coastal Biodiversity in Brazil ....................................................................... 625 ANTÔNIA CECÍLIA Z. AMARAL, SÍLVIO JABLONSKI Biodiversity and Conservation of Plants in Brazil ..................................................................................... 632 ANA MARIA GIULIETTI, RAYMOND M. HARLEY, LUCIANO PAGANUCCI DE QUEIROZ, MARIA DAS GRAÇAS LAPA WANDERLEY, CASSIO VAN DEN BERG Conservation of Terrestrial Invertebrates and Their Habitats in Brazil ..................................................... 640 THOMAS M. LEWINSOHN, ANDRÉ VICTOR LUCCI FREITAS, PAULO INÁCIO PRADO Conservation of the Biodiversity of Brazil's Inland Waters ....................................................................... 646 ANGELO A. AGOSTINHO, SIDINEI M. THOMAZ, LUIZ C. GOMES Conservation of Brazilian Amphibians ...................................................................................................... 653 DÉBORA L. SILVANO, MAGNO V. SEGALLA The Conservation of Brazilian Reptiles: Challenges for a Megadiverse Country..................................... 659 MIGUEL TREFAUT RODRIGUES Bird Conservation in Brazil........................................................................................................................ 665 MIGUEL ÂNGELO MARINI, FREDERICO INNECCO GARCIA Mammal Conservation in Brazil ................................................................................................................ 672 LEONORA PIRES COSTA, YURI LUIZ REIS LEITE, SÉRGIO LUCENA MENDES, ALBERT DAVID DITCHFIELD Deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia: History, Rates, and Consequences............................................... 680 PHILIP M. FEARNSIDE The Fate of the Amazonian Areas of Endemism...................................................................................... 689 JOSÉ MARIA CARDOSO DA SILVA, ANTHONY B. RYLANDS, GUSTAVO A. B. da FONSECA Challenges and Opportunities for Biodiversity Conservation in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest .................. 695 MARCELO TABARELLI, LUIZ PAULO PINTO, JOSÉ M. C. SILVA, MÁRCIA HIROTA, LÚCIO BEDÊ Changing the Course of Biodiversity Conservation in the Caatinga of Northeastern Brazil..................... 701 INARA R. LEAL, JOSÉ MARIA CARDOSO DA SILVA, MARCELO TABARELLI, THOMAS E. LACHER JR. Conservation of the Brazilian Cerrado...................................................................................................... 707 CARLOS A. KLINK, RICARDO B. MACHADO Safeguarding the Pantanal Wetlands: Threats and Conservation Initiatives ........................................... 714 MÔNICA B. HARRIS, WALFRIDO TOMAS, GUILHERME MOURÃO, CAROLINA J. DA SILVA, ERIKA GUIMARÃES, FÁTIMA SONODA, ELIANI FACHIM Conservation Alliances with Indigenous Peoples of the Amazon............................................................. 721 STEPHAN SCHWARTZMAN, BARBARA ZIMMERMAN Why We Need Megareserves in Amazonia .............................................................................................. 728 CARLOS A. PERES Lessons from Fragmentation Research: Improving Management and Policy Guidelines for Biodiversity Conservation ......................................................................................................................... 734 MARCELLO TABARELLI, CLAUDE GASCON Infrastructure and Conservation Policy in Brazil ....................................................................................... 740 JOHN REID, WILSON CABRAL DE SOUSA JR. Land Reform and Biodiversity Conservation in Brazil in the 1990s: Conflict and the Articulation of Mutual Interests ........................................................................................................................................ 747 LAURY CULLEN JR., KEITH ALGER, DENISE M. RAMBALDI Financial Mechanisms for Conservation in Brazil ..................................................................................... 756 CARLOS EDUARDO FRICKMANN YOUNG Essays Conservation and the Myth of Consensus................................................................................................ 762 M. NILS PETERSON, MARKUS J. PETERSON, TARLA RAI PETERSON Edge Influence on Forest Structure and Composition in Fragmented Landscapes ................................. 768 KAREN A. HARPER, S. ELLEN MACDONALD, PHILIP J. BURTON, JIQUAN CHEN, KIMBERLEY D. BROSOFSKE, SARI C. SAUNDERS, EUGÉNIE S. EUSKIRCHEN, DAR ROBERTS, MALANDING S. JAITEH, PER-ANDERS ESSEEN Contributed Papers

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Rural and Suburban Sprawl in the U.S. Midwest from 1940 to 2000 and Its Relation to Forest Fragmentation........................................................................................................................................... 793 VOLKER C. RADELOFF, ROGER B. HAMMER, SUSAN I. STEWART Effectiveness of Environmental Surrogates for the Selection of Conservation Area Networks ............... 815 SAHOTRA SARKAR, JAMES JUSTUS, TREVON FULLER, CHRIS KELLEY, JUSTIN GARSON, MICHAEL MAYFIELD Using Demographic Invariants to Detect Overharvested Bird Populations from Incomplete Data .......... 826 COLIN NIEL, JEAN-DOMINIQUE LEBRETON Using Distance from Putative Source Woodlots to Predict Occurrence of Forest Birds in Putative Sinks ......................................................................................................................................................... 836 ERICA NOL, CHARLES M. FRANCIS, DAWN M. BURKE Experimental Analysis of the Impact of Foxes on Freshwater Turtle Populations ................................... 845 RICKY-JOHN SPENCER, MICHAEL B. THOMPSON Effect of Vegetation Matrix on Animal Dispersal: Genetic Evidence from a Study of Endangered Skinks........................................................................................................................................................ 855 OLIVER BERRY, MANDY D. TOCHER, DIANNE M. GLEESON, STEPHEN D. SARRE Importance of Attitudinal Differences among Artisanal Fishers toward Co-Management and Conservation of Marine Resources .......................................................................................................... 865 STEFAN GELCICH, GARETH EDWARDS-JONES, MICHEL J. KAISER Use of Simulated Annealing for Identifying Essential Fish Habitat in a Multispecies Context ................. 876 ROSAMONDE R. COOK, PETER J. AUSTER Patch Size and Connectivity Thresholds for Butterfly Habitat Restoration............................................... 887 CHERYL B. SCHULTZ, ELIZABETH E. CRONE Reduced Diversity and Complexity in the Leaf-Litter Ant Assemblage of Colombian Coffee Plantations ................................................................................................................................................ 897 INGE ARMBRECHT, LEONARDO RIVERA, IVETTE PERFECTO Shade-Coffee Plantations as Refuges for Tropical Wild Orchids in Central Veracruz, Mexico ............... 908 LISLIE SOLIS-MONTERO, ALEJANDRO FLORES-PALACIOS, ANDREA CRUZ-ANGÓN Matrix Models as a Tool for Understanding Invasive Plant and Native Plant Interactions ....................... 917 DIANE M. THOMSON Effects of Life-History Traits on Responses of Plant Species to Forest Fragmentation........................... 929 ANNETTE KOLB, MARTIN DIEKMANN Research Notes Wildlife Loss through Domestication: the Case of Endangered Key Deer ............................................... 939 M. NILS PETERSON, ROEL R. LOPEZ, EDWARD J. LAURENT, PHILIP A. FRANK, NOVA J. SILVY, JIANGUO LIU Diversity Relationships among Taxonomic Groups in Recovering and Restored Forests ....................... 955 MADHUR ANAND, SOPHIE LAURENCE, BRONWYN RAYFIELD Comments Effects of Set-Aside Land on Farmland Biodiversity: Comments on Van Buskirk and Willi..................... 963 DAVID KLEIJN, ANDRÁS BÁLDI Meta-Analysis of Farmland Biodiversity within Set-Aside Land: Reply to Kleijn and Báldi ...................... 967 JOSH VAN BUSKIRK, YVONNE WILLI Diversity Conservation in Austral and Neotropical America: Building Scientific Capacity Equal to the Challenges ................................................................................................................................................ 969 JON PAUL RODRÍGUEZ, JAVIER A. SIMONETTI, ANDREA PREMOLI, MIGUEL ÂNGELO MARINI Book Reviews Rule Breaking by Building a Frame for Restoration.................................................................................. 977 Rohan J. Sadler Black Earth from Red Desert and Green Hell........................................................................................... 978 Francis E. Putz The Long Lens of Forest History .............................................................................................................. 979 Grace S. Brush Conservation on the Right Track .............................................................................................................. 981 Donald G. Reid

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Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Cracids but Already Knew................................................. 982 Daniel M. Brooks Time-Lagged Scientific Dialogues ............................................................................................................ 983 Konstantinos I. Stergiou Recently Received Books (December 2004 January 2005).................................................................... 985 CRUSTACEANA Vol. 78, No. 3, March 2005 Densities, diel activity, burrow shape, and habitat characteristics of Gecarcinus (Johngarthia) planatus Stimpson, 1860 (Decapoda, Brachyura, Gecarcinidae) at Socorro Island, Revillagigedo, Mexico A. Pérez-Chi.............................................................................................................................................. 255 Diet comparison of the bathyal shrimps, Aristeus antennatus (Risso, 1816) and Aristaeomorpha foliacea (Risso, 1827) (Decapoda, Aristeidae) in the eastern Mediterranean N. Chartosia, T. Tzomos, M. Kitsos, I. Karani, A. Tselepides & A. Koukouras ........................................ 273 A new Early Campanian species of Xanthosia (Decapoda, Brachyura) from northwestern Germany B. van Bakel, R. Fraaije & J. Jagt ............................................................................................................. 285 The role of size-selective predation in the displacement of Orconectes crayfishes following rusty crayfish invasion B. Roth & J. Kitchell .................................................................................................................................. 297 New observations on live Loculicytheretta pavonia (Brady, 1866) (Ostracoda) from Turkey O. Külköylüoglu, J. Colin & M. Kiliç .......................................................................................................... 311 A redescription of Callianassa denticulata Lutze, 1937 with the designation of a neotype (Thalassinidea, Gourretiidae) K. Sakai & M. Türkay ................................................................................................................................ 323 A review of the biology and fisheries of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Decapoda, Caridea, Pandalidae) in European waters D. Vafidis, C. Politou, A. Carbonell & J. Company ................................................................................... 335 Confirmation of the occurrence of Parapenaeus investigatoris Alcock & Anderson, 1899 (Decapoda, Penaeidae) in Japan M. Nagata & J. Ohtomi.............................................................................................................................. 353 Notes and News........................................................................................................................................ 361 A method of tagging Aratus pisonii (H. Milne Edwards, 1837) (Decapoda, Brachyura, Grapsidae) crabs for population and behavioural studies R. Rader & S. Reed .................................................................................................................................. 361 Occurrence of Periclimenes scriptus (Risso, 1822) (Decapoda, Caridea, Pontoniinae) in Portuguese waters C. 7.59d'Udekem 7.59d'Acoz.................................................................................................................... 367 Features of an intersex Chinese mitten crab, Eriocheir japonica sinensis (Decapoda, Brachyura) B. Tang, Q. Wang, L. Chen & S. Yang ..................................................................................................... 371 Reviews..................................................................................................................................................... 379 [Review of] V. Ja. Berger, A. D. Naumov, N. V. Usov, M. A. Zubaha, I. Smolyar, R. Tatusko & S. Levitus, 2003. 36-year time series (1963-1998) of zooplankton, temperature, and salinity in the White Sea S. Timofeev............................................................................................................................................... 379 [Review of] R. N. Burukovsky, 2003. Shrimps of the family Nematocarcinidae S. Timofeev............................................................................................................................................... 379 [Review of] B. I. Sirenko (ed.), 2004. Fauna and ecosystems of the Laptev Sea and adjacent deep waters of the Arctic Basin, 1-2 S. Timofeev............................................................................................................................................... 380 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY Vol. 47, No.1 December 2004 Changes in mobility and speciation of heavy metals in clay-amended incinerator fly ash.................... 1 - 10 T. T. Lim, J. H. Tay, L. C. Tan, et al. Behavior of radium, thorium and uranium in groundwater near the Buena Lagoon in the Coastal Zone of the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ..........................................................................................11 - 19

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D. C. Lauria, R. M. R. Almeida, O. Sracek Geoenvironmental appraisal in a developing urban area.................................................................... 20 - 29 N. Subba Rao and R. Prathap Reddy TDR detection of nonaqueous phase liquids in sandy soils using the eigendecomposition method .. 30 - 37 A. M. O. Mohamed and R. A. Said Heavy metal contamination of soil around Pali Industrial Area, Rajasthan, India ...............................38 - 44 A. K. Krishna and P. K. Govil Anisotropy of gas permeability associated with cleat pattern in a coal seam of the Kushiro coalfield in Japan................................................................................................................................................ 45 - 50 Huoyin Li, Sohei Shimada, Ming Zhang Aquifer vulnerability assessment using the DRASTIC model at Russeifa landfill, northeast Jordan .. 51 - 62 Ali El Naqa Groundwater mining of bedrock aquifers in the Denver Basin – past, present, and future................. 63 - 68 J. E. Moore, R. G. Raynolds, P. E. Barkmann Incidences of water-rock interaction on natural resources characters, Oum Er-Rabia Basin (Morocco) ............................................................................................................................................. 69 - 75 Said Ettazarini Advantages of longer–term tracing -- three case studies from Slovenia............................................. 76 - 83 Janja Kogovšek and Metka Petric Seasonal variations and mechanisms of groundwater nitrate pollution in the Gaza Strip .................. 84 - 90 Y. Abu Maila, I. El-Nahal, M. R. Al-Agha A landslide dam breach induced debris flow – a case study on downstream hazard areas delineation..........................................................................................................................................91 - 101 Chien-Yuan Chen, Tien-Chien Chen, Fan-Chieh Yu, et al. Geostatistical method to delineate anomalies of multi-scale spatial variation in hydrogeological changes due to the ChiChi earthquake in the ChouShui River alluvial fan in Taiwan.....................102 - 118 Yun-Bin Lin, Yih-Chi Tan, Yu-Pin Lin, et al. Effects of iron black varnish on petrophysical properties of building sandstone .............................119 - 131 Céline Thomachot and Daniel Jeannette Barium anomaly in the Cambrian-Vendian aquifer system in North Estonia................................... 132 - 139 Andres Marandi, Enn Karro, Erik Puura Geochemical characteristics of the slip zones of a landslide in granitic saprolite, Hong Kong: implications for their development and microenvironments.............................................................140 - 154 B.-P. Wen, N. S. Duzgoren-Aydin, A. Aydin Views and news December 2004 ...............................................................................................................................155 - 156 Book Reviews December 2004 ...............................................................................................................................157 - 158 Events December 2004 ...............................................................................................................................159 - 162 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY Vol. 47, No. 3, February 2005 Environmental impact of geothermal fluids on surface water, groundwater and streambed sediments in the Akarcay Basin, Turkey ...........................................................................................................325 - 340 M. S. Dogdu and C. S. Bayari Piperno from Campi Flegrei: a relevant stone in the historical and monumental heritage of Naples (Italy) ................................................................................................................................................341 - 352 Domenico Calcaterra, Alessio Langella, Roberto de Gennaro, et al. Selenium fractionation and speciation in rocks, soils, waters and plants in polluted surface mine environment ..................................................................................................................................... 353 - 360 M. Bujdoš, A. Mulová, J. Kubová, et al. Simulation of groundwater flow and environmental effects resulting from pumping .......................361 - 374 Nguyen Cao Don, Hiroyuki Araki, Hiroyuki Yamanishi, et al. Tropical residual soil as compacted soil liners.................................................................................375 - 381 M. R. Taha and M. H. Kabir

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Suspended sediment sources and tributary effects in the lower reaches of a coastal plain stream as indicated by radionuclides, Loco Bayou, Texas...............................................................................382 - 395 K. M. Yeager, P. H. Santschi, J. D. Phillips, et al. Environmental impacts of groundwater overdraft: selected case studies in the southwestern United States ...............................................................................................................................................396 - 404 S. Zektser, H. A. Loáiciga, J. T. Wolf GIS-hydrological models for managing water resources in the Zarqa River basin .........................405 - 411 N. Al-Abed, F. Abdulla, A. Abu Khyarah The significance of morphometric analysis for obtaining groundwater potential zones in a structurally controlled terrain............................................................................................................412 - 420 P. D. Sreedevi, K. Subrahmanyam, Shakeel Ahmed Temporal variability of phosphorus fractions in Irish karst springs ..................................................421 - 430 Garrett Kilroy and Catherine Coxon Mobilization, redistribution and bioavailability of potentially toxic elements in Shidiya phosphorites, Southeast Jordan.............................................................................................................................431 - 444 M. Al-Hwaiti, G. Matheis, G. Saffarini Temporal variation in discharge chemistry and portal flow from the 8-Level adit, Lynx Mine, Myra Falls Operations, Vancouver Island, British Columbia .................................................................... 445 - 456 Alexandre J. Desbarats and Gavin C. Dirom Book Reviews February 2005 p. 457 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY Vol. 47, No. 5, March 2005 Seasonality of diel cycles of dissolved trace-metal concentrations in a Rocky Mountain stream ...603 - 614 David A. Nimick, Thomas E. Cleasby, R. Blaine McCleskey Analysis of the environmental sensitivities of a typical dynamic epikarst system at the Nongla monitoring site, Guangxi, China....................................................................................................... 615 - 619 Zhang Cheng, Yuan Daoxian, Cao Jianhua Unusual cases of mining subsidence from Great Britain, Germany and Colombia.........................620 - 631 F. G. Bell, L. J. Donnelly, D. D. Genske, et al. Environmental impact assessment using rapid impact assessment matrix (RIAM) for Russeifa landfill, Jordan.................................................................................................................................. 632 - 639 Ali El-Naqa Distinct runoff processes in granite and sandstone drainage basins near Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.640 - 646 Yukiya Tanaka, Yukinori Matsukura, N. Batnasan, et al. Guidelines to locate and protect high-quality groundwater in Baiyu Mountain area of China .........647 - 652 Yunfeng Li, Zhonghua Xu, Jiangxia Wang, et al. Aquifer’s vulnerability to pollution: a space, time and event dependent measure...........................653 - 659 E. Cameron Rapid detection of bioavailable heavy metals in sediment porewaters using acid-volatile sulfide gel probes ..............................................................................................................................................660 - 669 Harry M. Edenborn The potential use of serpentinite in the passive treatment of acid mine drainage: batch experiments670 - 684 Louis R. Bernier Engineering geological assessments of the repeated plane shear slope instability threatening Babadag (Turkey) and its environmental impacts ...........................................................................685 - 701 S. Yeliz Cevik and R. Ulusay Prehistoric and recent mass movements of the World Cultural Heritage Site Hallstatt, Austria ..... 702 - 714 J. Rohn, D. Ehret, M. Moser, et al. Rainfall duration and debris-flow initiated studies for real-time monitoring ..................................... 715 - 724 Chen Chien-Yuan, Chen Tien-Chien, Yu Fan-Chieh, et al. Estimation of environmental impacts on the water quality of the Tahtalidam watershed in Izmir, Turkey ..............................................................................................................................................725 - 728 Necati Gülbahar and Hatim Elhatip Arcellacean (thecamoebian) evidence of land-use change and eutrophication in Frenchman’s Bay, Pickering, Ontario ............................................................................................................................729 - 739

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E. G. Reinhardt, M. Little, S. Donato, et al. Events April 2005 .........................................................................................................................................740 - 744 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY Vol. 47, No. 6, March 2005 Radon variations in an active landslide zone along the Pindar River, in Chamoli District, Garhwal Lesser Himalaya, India ....................................................................................................................745 - 750 V.M. Choubey, S.K. Bartarya, R.C. Ramola GEOCITY: a drill-hole database as a tool to assess geological hazard in Napoli urban area ........ 751 - 762 I Alberico, P Petrosino, G Zeni, et al. Major ion chemistry of groundwaters in the Bahar area, Hamadan, western Iran ..........................763 - 772 Mohsen Jalali Sulfur-isotope distribution and contamination related to the Balya Pb–Zn Mine in Turkey .............773 - 781 Murat Budakoglu and Lisa M. Pratt Geology and rural landscapes in central Spain (Guadalajara, Castilla—La Mancha).....................782 - 794 A. García-Quintana, J. F. Martín-Duque, J. A. González-Martín, et al. Composite landfill liner design with Ankara clay, Turkey................................................................. 795 - 803 I. Met and H. Akgün How to cut a sediment core for 210Pb geochronology.................................................................... 804 - 810 Xueqiang Lu and Eiji Matsumoto Geochemical characteristics of mineral air particles emitted inside a clay atomisation plant which introduces waste recycling processes .............................................................................................811 - 819 V Sanfelix, ET Gòmez, MM Jordán, et al. Nutrient chemistry of groundwater in an intensively irrigated region of southern India...................820 - 830 N. Rajmohan and L. Elango A century of land subsidence in Ravenna, Italy...............................................................................831 - 846 P. Teatini, M. Ferronato, G. Gambolati, et al. High arsenic contents in groundwater of central Spain ................................................................... 847 - 854 A. García-Sánchez, A. Moyano, P. Mayorga Geo-volcanological, mineralogical and environmental aspects of quarry materials related to pleural neoplasm in the area of Biancavilla, Mount Etna (Eastern Sicily, Italy) ..........................................855 - 868 F. Burragato, P. Comba, V. Baiocchi, et al. Characterization of subsurface geometry and radioactivity distribution in the trench containing Chernobyl clean-up wastes..............................................................................................................869 - 881 D. Bugai, V. Kashparov, L. Dewiére, et al. Book Reviews April 2005 .........................................................................................................................................882 - 882 Events Events - April 2005...........................................................................................................................883 - 887 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY Vol. 47, No. 7, May 2005 Ground magnetic survey of a municipal solid waste landfill: pilot study in Argentina......................889 - 897 C. Prezzi, M. J. Orgeira, H. Ostera, et al. Hydrogeochemistry and carbonate saturation model of groundwater, Khanyounis Governorate—Gaza Strip, Palestine .......................................................................................................................898 - 906 Mohammad R. Al-Agha Application of electrical imaging to leachate plume evolution studies under in-situ and model conditions.........................................................................................................................................907 - 914 Nikos Depountis, Charles Harris, Michael C. R. Davies, et al. Mine-drainage water from coal mines of Kerman region, Iran.........................................................915 - 925 J. Shahabpour, M. Doorandish, A. Abbasnejad Removal of chromate from drinking water using powder carbon steel............................................926 - 930 V. Campos and P. M. Büchler Vertical movement of water in a High Plains Aquifer induced by a pumping well...........................931 - 941 Xunhong Chen, Yanfeng Yin, J. W. Goeke, et al.

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Hydrochemical relationships in groundwater from central São Paulo State, Brazil.........................942 - 955 É.M. Tonetto and D. M. Bonotto Comparative evaluation of landslide susceptibility in Minamata area, Japan ................................. 956 - 966 H. B. Wang and K. Sassa A review of the synthesis and characterisation of pillared clays and related porous materials for cracking of vegetable oils to produce biofuels .................................................................................967 - 981 J. Theo Kloprogge, Loc V. Duong, Ray L. Frost Probabilistic landslide susceptibility and factor effect analysis........................................................982 - 990 S Lee and Jasmi Abdul Talib Application of grey numerical model to groundwater resource evaluation ...................................... 991 - 999 Q. Wu, W. Zhou, S. Li, et al. Origin of abnormal substances discharged from Baozhusi Dam Base, Sichuan, China.............1000 - 1009 Qian Hui, K. W. F. Howard, Zhang Yiqian, et al. Slaking durability and its effect on the doline formation in the gypsum.......................................1010 - 1016 Isik Yilmaz and Ergun Karacan Development and application of a CAD interface for fractured rock............................................1017 - 1027 Thomas Kalbacher, Wenqing Wang, Chris McDermott, et al. Book Reviews May 2005 .....................................................................................................................................1028 - 1029 Views and news May 2005 .....................................................................................................................................1030 - 1031 Events Events - May 2005 .......................................................................................................................1032 - 1036 ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION Vol. 137, No. 1, September 2005 The United Kingdom Acid Waters Monitoring Network: a review of the first 15 years and introduction to the special issue .................................................................................................................................. 3-13 D.T. Monteith and C.D. Evans Changes in the atmospheric deposition of acidifying compounds in the UK between 1986 and 2001. 15-25 D. Fowler, R.I. Smith, J.B.A. Muller, G. Hayman and K.J. Vincent Trends in surface water chemistry of acidified UK Freshwaters, 1988–2002 ....................................... 27-39 J.J.L. Davies, A. Jenkins, D.T. Monteith, C.D. Evans and D.M. Cooper Evidence of sulphur and nitrogen deposition signals at the United Kingdom Acid Waters Monitoring Network sites.......................................................................................................................................... 41-54 D.M. Cooper Long-term increases in surface water dissolved organic carbon: Observations, possible causes and environmental impacts ...........................................................................................................................55-71 C.D. Evans, D.T. Monteith and D.M. Cooper Nitrate leaching as a confounding factor in chemical recovery from acidification in UK upland waters 73-82 C.J. Curtis, C.D. Evans, R.C. Helliwell and D.T. Monteith Biological responses to the chemical recovery of acidified fresh waters in the UK.............................83-101 D.T. Monteith, A.G. Hildrew, R.J. Flower, P.J. Raven, W.R.B. Beaumont, P. Collen, A.M. Kreiser, E.M. Shilland and J.H. Winterbottom The ecology of acidification and recovery: changes in herbivore-algal food web linkages across a stream pH gradient ............................................................................................................................103-118 M.E. Ledger and A.G. Hildrew Defining reference conditions for acidified waters using a modern analogue approach ...................119-133 Gavin L. Simpson, Ewan M. Shilland, Julie M. Winterbottom and Janey Keay Reconstructing pre-acidification pH for an acidified Scottish loch: A comparison of palaeolimnological and modelling approaches..................................................................................135-149 R.W. Battarbee, D.T. Monteith, S. Juggins, C.D. Evans, A. Jenkins and G.L. Simpson Temporal trends in spheroidal carbonaceous particle deposition derived from annual sediment traps and lake sediment cores and their relationship with non-marine sulphate....................................... 151-163 N.L. Rose and D.T. Monteith Regional scale evidence for improvements in surface water chemistry 1990–2001.........................165-176

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B.L. Skjelkvåle, J.L. Stoddard, D.S. Jeffries, K. Tørseth, T. Høgåsen, J. Bowman, J. Mannio, D.T. Monteith, R. Mosello, M. Rogora et al. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY Vol. 24, N0. 7, Julio 2005 Environmental Chemistry EFFECTS OF METAL AND ORGANOPHOSPHATE MIXTURES ON CERIODAPHNIA DUBIA SURVIVAL AND REPRODUCTION Amy M. Mahar and Mary C. Watzin........................................................................................................ 1579 EVALUATION OF THE ISHIKAWA CELL LINE BIOASSAY FOR THE DETECTION OF ESTROGENIC SUBSTANCES FROM SEDIMENT EXTRACTS Shinya Hashimoto, Yoko Akatsuka, Ryo Kurihara, Sumiko Matsuoka, Maiko Nakatsukuri, Yuko Kurokawa, Yukinori Tani and Shin'ichiro Kawai ..................................................................................... 1587 EFFECTS OF DOSE AND PARTICLE SIZE ON ACTIVATED CARBON TREATMENT TO SEQUESTER POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS AND POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS John R. Zimmerman, David Werner, Upal Ghosh, Rod N. Millward, Todd S. Bridges and Richard G. Luthy ....................................................................................................................................................... 1594 VAPOR PRESSURE OF TEN POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL CONGENERS AND TWO COMMERCIAL FLUIDS AS A FUNCTION OF TEMPERATURE Katsuhiko Nakajoh, Etsuro Shibata, Tomohiro Todoroki, Atsushi Ohara, Katsushi Nishizawa and Takashi Nakamura.................................................................................................................................. 1602 EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT FORMS OF ORGANIC CARBON ON THE PARTITIONING AND BIOAVAILABILITY OF NONYLPHENOL Robert M. Burgess, Marguerite C. Pelletier, Jennifer L. Gundersen, Monique M. Perron and Stephan A. Ryba..................................................................................................................................... 1609 DEGRADATION OF CITALOPRAM BY SIMULATED SUNLIGHT Jeong-Wook Kwon and Kevin L. Armbrust ............................................................................................. 1618 DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING OF A GREEN FLUORESCENT PROTEIN–BASED BACTERIAL BIOSENSOR FOR MEASURING BIOAVAILABLE ARSENIC IN CONTAMINATED GROUNDWATER SAMPLES Vivian Hsiu-Chuan Liao and Kun-Lin Ou ................................................................................................ 1624 TIME TRENDS (1983–1999) FOR ORGANOCHLORINES AND POLYBROMINATED DIPHENYL ETHERS IN RAINBOW SMELT (OSMERUS MORDAX) FROM LAKES MICHIGAN, HURON, AND SUPERIOR, USA Sergei M. Chernyak, Clifford P. Rice, Richard T. Quintal, Linda J. Begnoche, James P. Hickey and Bryan T. Vinyard ..................................................................................................................................... 1632 Environmental Toxicology EFFECTS OF WATER HARDNESS ON TOXICOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO CHRONIC WATERBORNE SILVER EXPOSURE IN EARLY LIFE STAGES OF RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) Tammie P. Morgan, Christine M. Guadagnolo, Martin Grosell and Chris M. Wood............................... 1642 DEVELOPMENTAL IMPACT OF ATRAZINE ON METAMORPHING XENOPUS LAEVIS AS REVEALED BY NUCLEAR ANALYSIS AND MORPHOLOGY Jennifer L. Freeman and A. Lane Rayburn............................................................................................. 1648 VITELLOGENIN DETECTION AND CHICK PATHOLOGY ARE USEFUL ENDPOINTS TO EVALUATE ENDOCRINE-DISRUPTING EFFECTS IN AVIAN ONE-GENERATION REPRODUCTION STUDY Kazumoto Shibuya, Masaru Wada, Makoto Mizutani, Kazuo Sato, Masafumi Itabashi and Tamami Sakamoto................................................................................................................................................ 1654 INFLUENCE OF WATER CHEMISTRY ON THE ACUTE TOXICITY OF COPPER AND ZINC TO THE CLADOCERAN CERIODAPHNIA CF DUBIA Ross V. Hyne, Fleur Pablo, Moreno Julli and Scott J. Markich 1667 CAN THE CHOICE OF ENDPOINT LEAD TO CONTRADICTORY RESULTS OF MIXTURE-TOXICITY EXPERIMENTS? Nina Cedergreen and Jens C. Streibig ................................................................................................... 1676

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EFFECTS OF LAMBDA-CYHALOTHRIN IN TWO DITCH MICROCOSM SYSTEMS OF DIFFERENT TROPHIC STATUS Ivo Roessink, Gertie H.P. Arts, J. Dick M. Belgers, Fred Bransen, Steve J. Maund and Theo C.M. Brock ....................................................................................................................................................... 1684 REDUCTION AND METHYLATION OF MERCURY IN THE TERRESTRIAL ISOPOD PORCELLIO SCABER (CRUSTACEA) AND ITS ENVIRONMENT Nataša Nolde, Damjana Drobne, Milena Horvat and Vesna Jereb ........................................................ 1697 IDENTIFICATION OF SIX DIFFERENTIALLY EXPRESSED GENES IN RESPONSE TO COPPER EXPOSURE IN THE AQUATIC PLANT LEMNA GIBBA (DUCKWEED) Tariq A. Akhtar, Mark A. Lampi and Bruce M. Greenberg 1705 UNEXPECTED REDUCTION IN REPRODUCTION OF COLLEMBOLA EXPOSED TO AN ARSENIC-CONTAMINATED SOIL Yves Crouau and Laurent Cazes............................................................................................................ 1716 MONITORING EXPOSURE OF NORTHERN CARDINALS, CARDINALIS CARDINALIS, TO CHOLINESTERASE-INHIBITING PESTICIDES: ENZYME ACTIVITY, REACTIVATIONS, AND INDICATORS OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS Jonathan D. Maul and Jerry L. Farris ..................................................................................................... 1721 PHYTOCHELATIN INDUCTION, CADMIUM ACCUMULATION, AND ALGAL SENSITIVITY TO FREE CADMIUM ION IN SCENEDESMUS VACUOLATUS Séverine Le Faucheur, Renata Behra and Laura Sigg.......................................................................... 1731 FISH CRITICAL CELLULAR RESIDUES FOR SURFACTANTS AND SURFACTANT MIXTURES Mary Jo Bernhard and Scott D. Dyer...................................................................................................... 1738 THE PESTICIDE MALATHION REDUCES SURVIVAL AND GROWTH IN DEVELOPING ZEBRAFISH Leslie W. Cook, Christopher J. Paradise and Barbara Lom................................................................... 1745 SUBLETHAL EFFECTS OF CADMIUM ON PREY CHOICE AND CAPTURE EFFICIENCY IN JUVENILE BROOK TROUT (SALVELINUS FONTINALIS) David J. Riddell, Joseph M. Culp and Donald J. Baird ........................................................................... 1751 EFFECTS OF IONIC LIQUIDS ON THE SURVIVAL, MOVEMENT, AND FEEDING BEHAVIOR OF THE FRESHWATER SNAIL, PHYSA ACUTA Randall J. Bernot, Erin E. Kennedy and Gary A. Lamberti .................................................................... 1759 SYNERGISTIC EFFECTS OF ESFENVALERATE AND INFECTIOUS HEMATOPOIETIC NECROSIS VIRUS ON JUVENILE CHINOOK SALMON MORTALITY Mark A. Clifford, Kai J. Eder, Ingeborg Werner and Ronald P. Hedrick ................................................ 1766 IDENTIFICATION OF CHLORFENVINPHOS TOXICITY IN A MUNICIPAL EFFLUENT IN SYDNEY, NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA Howard C. Bailey, James R. Elphick, Rick Krassoi, Ann-Marie Mulhall, Adam J. Lovell and Daniel J. Slee ......................................................................................................................................................... 1773 CHANGES IN PRODUCTIVITY AND CONTAMINANTS IN BALD EAGLES NESTING ALONG THE LOWER COLUMBIA RIVER, USA Jeremy A. Buck, Robert G. Anthony, Carol A. Schuler, Frank B. Isaacs and Donald E. Tillitt ............... 1779 MERCURY PATTERNS IN WOOD DUCK EGGS FROM A CONTAMINATED RESERVOIR IN SOUTH CAROLINA, USA Robert A. Kennamer, Jason R. Stout, Brian P. Jackson, Sheila V. Colwell, I. Lehr Brisbin Jr. and Joanna Burger ........................................................................................................................................ 1793 INTERSEASONAL VARIATION IN BLOOD CONCENTRATIONS OF ORGANOCHLORINES IN GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS (LARUS MARINUS) Jan Ove Bustnes, Janneche Utne Skaare, Vidar Berg and Torkild Tveraa ........................................... 1801 ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF LEAD IN WATER AND DIET TO THE AMPHIPOD HYALELLA AZTECA John M. Besser, William G. Brumbaugh, Eric L. Brunson and Christopher G. Ingersoll....................... 1807 Hazard/Risk Assessment CLUSTER ANALYSIS OF CONTAMINATED SEDIMENT DATA: NODAL ANALYSIS S. Ian Hartwell and Larry W. Claflin........................................................................................................ 1816 ERRATUM .............................................................................................................................................. 1835

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ESTUARIES Vol. 28, N0. 2 April 2005 Historical Ecology of a Central California Estuary: 150 Years of Habitat Change. Eric Van Dyke and Kerstin Wasson................................................................................................................................ 173–189. Ultraviolet-B Radiation Effects on Natural Phytoplankton Assemblages of Central San Francisco Bay. Victoria E. Hogue, Frances P. Wilkerson, and Richard C. Dugdale........................................ 190–203. Genetic Effects of a Large-scale Spartina alterniflora (Smooth Cordgrass) Dieback and Recovery in the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Keith R. Edwards, Steven E. Travis, and C. Edward Proffitt............. 204–214. Response of Submersed Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) in Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana to the 1997–2001 El Niño Southern Oscillation Shifts. Hyun Jung Cho and Michael A. Poirrier ........................ 215–225. Fish Biomass Size Spectra in Chesapeake Bay. Sukgeun Jung and Edward D. Houde................ 226–240. Linking Phytoplankton Community Composition with Juvenile-phase Growth in the Northern Quahog Mercenaria mercenaria (L.). Dianne I. Greenfield, Darcy J. Lonsdale, and Robert M. Cerrato ............................................................................................................................................. 241–251. Aboveground and Belowground Productivity of Spartina alterniflora (Smooth Cordgrass) in Natural and Created Louisiana Salt Marshes. Keith R. Edwards and Kaili P. Mills ..................................... 252–265. Diel Vertical Migration and Seasonal Timing of the Larvae of Three Sympatric Cancrid Crabs, Cancer spp., in Southeastern Alaska. Wongyu Park and Thomas C. Shirley................................. 266–273. The Grazing Effects of Grass Shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio, on Epiphytic Microalgae Associated with Spartina alterniflora. Zoraida J. Quiñones-Rivera and John W. Fleeger ................................. 274–285. Effects of Nitrogen Addition and Salt Grass (Distichlis spicata) upon High Salt Marsh Vegetation in Northern California, USA. Bibit Halliday Traut ................................................................................. 286–295. Spawning Densities, Egg Densities, Size Structure, and Movement Patterns of Spawning Horseshoe Crabs, Limulus polyphemus, within Four Coastal Embayments on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. M. J. James-Pirri, K. Tuxbury, S. Marino, and S. Koch ......................................... 296–313. Freshwater-saltwater Interface and Estuarine Sediment In Situ Assays Based on Post-exposure Feeding of Chironomids and Polychaetes. Sara Soares, Susana Moreira, Sofia Andrade, Lúcia Guilhermino, and Rui Ribeiro........................................................................................................... 314–319. FISHERY BULLETIN Vol. 103, No. 2, April 2005 Alonzo, Suzanne H., and Marc Mangel .............................................................................................229-245 Sex-change rules, stock dynamics, and the performance of spawning-per-recruit measures in protogynous stocks Brandon, Elisif A. A., Donald G. Calkins, Thomas R. Loughlin, and Randall W. Davis.....................246-257 Neonatal growth of Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) pups in Alaska Brouwer, Stephen L., and Marc H. Griffiths .......................................................................................258-269 Reproductive biology of carpenter seabream (Argyrozona argyrozona) (Pisces: Sparidae) in a marine protected area Burn, Douglas M., and Angela M. Doroff ...........................................................................................270-279 Decline in sea otter (Enhydra lutris) populations along the Alaska Peninsula, 1986-2001 Carlson, John K., and Ivy E. Baremore .............................................................................................280-291 Growth dynamics of the spinner shark (Carcharhinus brevipinna) off the United States southeast and Gulf of Mexico coasts: a comparison of methods Domeier, Michael L., Dale Kiefer, Nicole Nasby-Lucas, Adam Wagschal, and Frank O’Brien .........292-306 Tracking Pacific bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus orientalis) in the northeastern Pacific with an automated algorithm that estimates latitude by matching sea-surface-temperature data from satellites with temperature data from tags on fish Fischer, Andrew J., M. Scott Baker Jr., Charles A Wilson, and David L. Nieland .............................307-319 Age, growth, mortality, and radiometric age validation of gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus) from Louisiana Grabowski, Robert C., Thomas Windholz, and Yong Chen ..............................................................320-330 Estimating exploitable stock biomass for the Maine green sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) fishery using a spatial statistics approach Lowry, Mark S., and Karin A. Forney................................................................................................. 331-343 Abundance and distribution of California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) in central and northern California during 1998 and summer 1999

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Mackie, Michael C., Paul D. Lewis, Daniel J. Gaughan, and Stephen J. Newman...........................344-354 Variability in spawning frequency and reproductive development of the narrow-barred Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorus commerson) along the west coast of Australia Ruggerone, Gregory T., Ed Farley, Jennifer Nielson, and Peter Hagen ...........................................355-370 Seasonal marine growth of Bristol Bay sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in relation to competition with Asian pink salmon (O. gorbuscha) and the 1977 ocean regime shift Shoji, Jun, and Masaru Tanaka .........................................................................................................371-379 Distribution, feeding condition, and growth of Japanese Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorus niphonius) larvae in the Seto Inland Sea Wang, You-Gan, and Nick Ellis..........................................................................................................380-391 Maximum likelihood estimation of mortality and growth with individual variability from multiple length-frequency data Williams, Erik H., and Kyle W. Shertzer.............................................................................................392-403 Effects of fishing on growth traits: a simulation analysis Notes Burton, Michael L., Kenneth J. Brennan, Roldan C. Muñoz, and Richard O. Parker Jr....................404-406 Preliminary evidence of increased spawning aggregations of mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) at Riley’s Hump two years after establishment of the Tortugas South Ecological Reserve Carpentieri, Paolo, Francesco Colloca, Massimiliano Cardinale, Andrea Belluscio, and Giandomenico D. Ardizzone ..............................................................................................................411-416 Feeding habits of European hake (Merluccius merluccius) in the central Mediterranean Sea Gobert, Bertrand, Alain Guillou, Peter Murray, Patrick Berthou, Maria D. Oqueli Turcios, Ester Lopez, Pascal Lorance, Jérôme Huet, Nicolas Diaz, and Paul Gervain ...........................................417-425 Biology of the queen snapper (Etelis oculatus : Lutjanidae) in the Caribbean Graham, Rachel T., and Daniel W. Castellanos................................................................................426-432 Courtship and spawning behaviors of carangid species in Belize Hewitt, David A., and John M. Hoenig ...............................................................................................433-437 Comparison of two approaches for estimating natural mortality based on longevity Lindquist, David C., and Richard F. Shaw.........................................................................................438-444 Effects of current speed and turbidity on stationary light-trap catches of larval and juvenile fishes Macchi, Gustavo J., Marcelo Pájaro, and Adrián Madirolas..............................................................445-452 Can a change in spawning pattern of Argentine hake (Merluccius hubbsi) affect its recruitment? Raymundo-Huizar, Alma R., Horacio Pérez-España, Maite Mascaró, and Xavier Chiappa-Carrara 453-460 Feeding habits of the dwarf weakfish (Cynoscion nannus) off the coasts of Jalisco and Colima, Mexico Wood, Anthony D...............................................................................................................................461-466 Using bone measurements to estimate the original sizes of bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) from digested remains JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY Vol. 32, No.7, July 2005 Global patterns of plant diversity and floristic knowledge........................................................1107-1116(10) Authors: Kier, Gerold; Mutke, Jens; Dinerstein, Eric; Ricketts, Taylor H.; Küper, Wolfgang; Kreft, Holger; Barthlott, Wilhelm Environmental determinants of vascular plant species richness in the Austrian Alps.............1117-1127(11) Authors: Moser, Dietmar; Dullinger, Stefan; Englisch, Thorsten; Niklfeld, Harald; Plutzar, Christoph; Sauberer, Norbert; Zechmeister, Harald Gustav; Grabherr, Georg Structure and genetic diversity in Colliguaja odorifera Mol. (Euphorbiaceae), a shrub subjected to Pleisto-Holocenic natural perturbations in a mediterranean South American region..............1129-1138(10) Authors: Bull-Hereñu, Kester; Martínez, Enrique A.; Squeo, Francisco A. Relationships between bird species and tree species assemblages in forested habitats of eastern North America ..........................................................................................................................1139-1150(12) Authors: Lee, Pey-Yi; Rotenberry, John T. Temporal turnover of common species in avian assemblages in North America....................1151-1160(10) Authors: La Sorte, Frank A.; Boecklen, William J.

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A vegetation-based method to map climatic variation in the arctic–boreal transition area of Finnmark, north-easternmost Norway .....................................................................................1161-1186(26) Authors: Karlsen, Stein Rune; Elvebakk, Arve; Johansen, Bernt Fire history of Araucaria–Nothofagus forests in Villarrica National Park, Chile.......................1187-1202(16) Authors: González, Mauro E.; Veblen, Thomas T.; Sibold, Jason S. Aboriginal fire management in south-eastern Australia: aims and frequency ...........................1203-1208(6) Author: Gott, Beth Lichenological evidence for the recognition of inland rain forests in western North America .1209-1219(11) Authors: Goward, Trevor; Spribille, Toby Global distribution of the European species of the lichen genus Melanelia Essl. ...................1221-1241(21) Authors: Otte, Volker; Esslinger, Theodore L.; Litterski, Birgit Body size, biomic specialization and range size of African large mammals ...........................1243-1256(14) Authors: Fernández, Manuel Hernández; Vrba, Elisabeth S. Development of individual recognition of female southern elephant seals, Mirounga leonina, from Punta Norte Península Valdés, applying principal components analysis ................................1257-1266(10) Authors: Caiafa, Cesar F.; Proto, Araceli N.; Vergani, Daniel; Stanganelli, Zulma Historical biogeography and phylogeny of monachine seals (Pinnipedia: Phocidae) based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA data .......................................................................................1267-1279(13) Authors: Fyler, C. A.; Reeder, T. W.; Berta, A.; Antonelis, G.; Aguilar, A.; Androukaki, E. Cladistic biogeography: identity and place ................................................................................1281-1284(4) Parsimony analysis of endemicity: time for an epitaph? ...................................................................................................................................................1284-1286(3) Is the east–west division of haplotypes of the three-spot seahorse along Wallace's Line novel among marine organisms? ........................................................................................................1286-1286(1) A nice step towards the final frontier..........................................................................................1287-1288(2) Russia's Far East: a world apart ................................................................................................1288-1289(2) JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY Vol. 25, No.2, May 2005 Articles HAPLOSTOMIDES HIBERNICUS (COPEPODA: CYCLOPOIDA) LIVING IN THE COMPOUND ASCIDIAN POLYCLINUM AURANTIUM. Shigeko Ooishi............................................................... 181–189. THE LIFE HISTORY OF PONTOGAMMARUS ROBUSTOIDES, AN ALIEN AMPHIPOD SPECIES IN POLISH WATERS. Karolina Bacela and Alicja Konopacka........................................................ 190–195. THE INFLUENCE OF STARVATION AND AMINO ACIDS ON METABOLISM OF THE ANTARCTIC AMPHIPOD WALDECKIA OBESA. T. Janecki and S. Rakusa-Suszczewski................................. 196–202. COMPARISON OF FEEDING MECHANISMS, RESPIRATION, AND CLEANING BEHAVIOR IN TWO KALLIAPSEUDIDS, KALLIAPSEUDES MACSWEENYI AND PSAMMOKALLIAPSEUDES GRANULOSUS (PERACARIDA: TANAIDACEA). David T. Drumm ............................................... 203–211. FIELD OBSERVATIONS ON WHITE SHRIMP, LITOPENAEUS SETIFERUS, DURING SPRING SPAWNING SEASON IN SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A., 1980–2003. Lawrence B. DeLancey, James E. Jenkins, Mark B. Maddox, J. David Whitaker, and Elizabeth L. Wenner .................................... 212–218. A COEXISTENCE MECHANISM FOR TWO FRESHWATER PRAWNS IN THE PARANÁ RIVER FLOODPLAIN, ARGENTINA. Pablo Agustín Collins....................................................................... 219–225. POPULATION STRUCTURE, GROWTH, MORTALITY, AND SIZE AT SEXUAL MATURITY OF PALAEMON GRAVIERI (DECAPODA: CARIDEA: PALAEMONIDAE). Sunghan Kim................... 226–232. POPULATION STRUCTURE AND REPRODUCTION OF THE DEEP-WATER SHRIMP PLESIONIKA MARTIA (DECAPODA: PANDALIDAE) FROM THE EASTERN IONIAN SEA. Anna Chilari, Maria Thessalou-Legaki, and George Petrakis ................................................................... 233–241. TWO NEW CRANGONID SHRIMPS OF THE GENUS METACRANGON (DECAPODA, CARIDEA) FROM JAPAN. Jung Nyun Kim ....................................................................................................... 242–250. LIFE HISTORY AND REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF THE GILGIE, CHERAX QUINQUECARINATUS, A FRESHWATER CRAYFISH ENDEMIC TO SOUTHWESTERN AUSTRALIA. Stephen J. Beatty, David L. Morgan, and Howard S. Gill.......................................... 251–262. ASPECTS OF THE REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY AND GROWTH OF BALMAIN BUGS (IBACUS SPP.) (SCYLLARIDAE). James A. Haddy, Anthony J. Courtney, and Darren P. Roy.................... 263–273.

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EFFECT OF EXPOSURE TO ICE SLURRIES ON NONOVIGEROUS AND OVIGEROUS BLUE SWIMMER CRABS, PORTUNUS PELAGICUS. L. M. Bellchambers, K. D. Smith, and S. N. Evans274–278. HEMIGRAPSUS TAKANOI, NEW SPECIES, A SIBLING SPECIES OF THE COMMON JAPANESE INTERTIDAL CRAB H. PENICILLATUS (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA: GRAPSOIDEA). Akira Asakura and Seiichi Watanabe........................................................................................................ 279–292. GROWTH OF THE MANGROVE CRAB UCIDES CORDATUS (BRACHYURA, OCYPODIDAE). Marcelo Antonio Amaro Pinheiro, Ana Gláucia Fiscarelli, and Gustavo Yomar Hattori .................. 293–301. TREE-CLIMBING CRABS (POTAMONAUTIDAE AND SESARMIDAE) FROM PHYTOTELMIC MICROHABITATS IN RAINFOREST CANOPY IN MADAGASCAR. Neil Cumberlidge, Danté B. Fenolio, Mark E. Walvoord, and Jim Stout ...................................................................................... 302–308. JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH Vol. 27, No. 5, May 2005 HORIZONS: Aditee Mitra and Kevin J. Flynn Predator–prey interactions: is ‘ecological stoichiometry’ sufficient when good food goes bad?....... 393-399 ORIGINAL ARTICLES: Joseph Kane The demography of Calanus finmarchicus (Copepoda: Calanoida) in the Middle Atlantic Bight, USA, 1977–2001 ........................................................................................................................................ 401-414 Jeffrey M. Napp, Russell R. Hopcroft, Christine T. Baier, and Cheryl Clarke Distribution and species-specific egg production of Pseudocalanus in the Gulf of Alaska .............. 415-426 Georgina A. Gibson, David L. Musgrave, and Sarah Hinckley Non-linear dynamics of a pelagic ecosystem model with multiple predator and prey types ............ 427-447 Dag O. Hessen, Ellen van Donk, and Ramesh Gulati Seasonal seston stoichiometry: effects on zooplankton in cyanobacteria-dominated lakes............ 449-460 Dina M. Leech, Angela Padeletti, and Craig E. Williamson Zooplankton behavioral responses to solar UV radiation vary within and among lakes .................. 461-471 Pedro Cermeño, Emilio Marañón, Jaime Rodríguez, and Emilio Fernández Size dependence of coastal phytoplankton photosynthesis under vertical mixing conditions ......... 473-483 Luis Gimenez and Klaus Anger Effects of temporary food limitation on survival and development of brachyuran crab larvae ......... 485-494 SHORT COMMUNICATION: Stuart J. Whipple, Bernard C. Patten, and Peter G. Verity Colony growth and evidence for colony multiplication in Phaeocystis pouchetii (Prymnesiophyceae) isolated from mesocosm blooms ....................................................................................................... 495-501 ERRATUM: Takashi Kamiyama and Yukihiko Matsuyama Temporal changes in the ciliate assemblage and consecutive estimates of their grazing effect during the course of a Heterocapsa circularisquama bloom ................................................................... 503 JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH Vol. 54, No. 1, July 2005 Long-term changes of basic biological and chemical parameters at two stations in the middle Adriatic .................................................................................................................................................... 3-14 Ivona Marasovic, Živana Nincevic, Grozdan Kušpilic, Saša Marinovic and Sanda Marinov The dynamics of Chrysochromulina species in the Skagerrak in relation to environmental conditions 15-24 Einar Dahl, Espen Bagøien, Bente Edvardsen and Nils Chr. Stenseth Coupling between climate variability and coastal eutrophication: Evidence and outlook for the northern Gulf of Mexico......................................................................................................................... 25-35 Dubravko Justic, Nancy N. Rabalais and R. Eugene Turner The Irish Sea: Nutrient status and phytoplankton.................................................................................. 36-50 R.J. Gowen and B.M. Stewart Scaling the trophic status of the Aegean Sea, eastern Mediterranean ................................................. 51-57 Lydia Ignatiades External inputs as a contributor to eutrophication problems.................................................................. 58-69 T. Jickells

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N:Si ratios and the ‘balance of organisms’: PROWQM simulations of the northern North Sea ............ 70-91 Paul Tett and Jae-Young Lee Modelling marine phytoplankton growth under eutrophic conditions...................................................92-103 Kevin J. Flynn Three-dimensional (3D) ecological modelling of the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France).........104-124 P. Cugier, A. Ménesguen and J.F. Guillaud JOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY Vol. 36, No. 2, 2005 Development of Thyroid FollicIes and Changes in Thyroid Hormones During the Early Development of Korean Rockfish Sebastes schlegeli. Duk-Young Kang and Young Jin Chang.................................. 157 Optimum Dietary Pro te in Levels and Pro te in to Energy Ratios in Olive Flounder Paralichthys olivaceus. Kang-Woong Kim, Yong-Jin Kang, Se-Min Choi, Xiaojie Wang, Youn -Hee Choi, Sungchul C. Bai, and Jae-Yoon Jo and Jeong-Yeol Lee ......................................................................... 165 Comparison on Development and Larval Growth of Four Venerid Clams. Young-Baek Hm, Jean-Hee Bae and Sung-Bum Hur .................................................................................................................... 179 Growth and Hematological Changes of Rockfish, Sebastes schlegeli (Hilgendort) Exposed to Dietary Cu and Cd. Ju-Chan Kang, Seong-Gil Kim and Suck-Woo Jang ............................................ 188 Particle size Distributions in Two Lipid Emulsions Used for the Enrichment of Artemia nauplii as a Function of Their Preparation Method and Storage Time. Kyungmin Han, Inge Geurden, Paul Van der Meeren, Sungchul C. Bai and Patrick Sorgeloos ....................................... 196 Effect of Dietary Charcoal and Wood Vi negar Mixture (CV82) on Body Composition of Olive Flounder Paralichthys olivaceus. Jin Hyung Yoo, Seung Cheol Ji and Gwan Sik Jeong ............... 203 Larval Development and Rearing of Longtooth Grouper Epinephelus bruneus in Jeju Island, Korea. Young Bo Song, Seong Rip Oh, Jong Pyo Seo, Bo Geun Ji, Bong Soo Lim, Young Don Lee and Hyung Bae Kim......................................................................................... 209 Research Notes Reevaluation of the Phosphorus Requirement of Juvenile Olive Flounder Paralichthys olivaceus and the Bioavailability of Various Inorganic Phosphorus Sources. Se-Min Choi, Kang-Wong Kim, Yong-Jin Kang, Xiaojie Wang, Jae-Won Kim, Gwan-Yeol Yoo and Sungchul C. Bai ........................................................................................................................................ 217 Comparison of the Coat Protein Gene of Nervous Necrosis Virus (NNV) Detected from Marine Fishes in Korea. Myung-Joo Oh, Sung-Ju Jung, and Shin-Ichi Kitamura ................................................ 223 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES Vol. 293, 2005 RESEARCH ARTICLES Mullineaux LS, Mills SW, Sweetman AK, Beaudreau AH, Metaxas A, Hunt HL Vertical, lateral and temporal structure in larval distributions at hydrothermal vents ..............................1-16 Ning X, Li WKW, Cai Y, Shi J Comparative analysis of bacterioplankton and phytoplankton in three ecological provinces of the northern South China Sea ..................................................................................................................... 17-28 Sobrino C, Montero O, Lubián LM Effect of UV-A and UV-B on diel patterns of growth and metabolic activity in Nannochloris atomus cultures assessed by flow cytometry ..................................................................................................... 29-35 Benedetti-Cecchi L, Bertocci I, Vaselli S, Maggi E Determinants of spatial pattern at different scales in two populations of the marine alga Rissoella verruculosa............................................................................................................................................. 37-47 Jensen SI, Kühl M, Glud RN, Jørgensen LB, Priemé A Oxic microzones and radial oxygen loss from roots of Zostera marina................................................. 49-58 Hasegawa N, Iizumi H, Mukai H Nitrogen dynamics of the surfgrass Phyllospadix iwatensis .................................................................. 59-68 Renegar DA, Riegl BM Effect of nutrient enrichment and elevated CO2 partial pressure on growth rate of Atlantic scleractinian coral Acropora cervicornis ................................................................................................69-76 Ribak G, Heller J, Genin A

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Mucus-net feeding on organic particles by the vermetid gastropod Dendropoma maximum in and below the surf zone................................................................................................................................77-87 Collin R, McLellan M, Gruber K, Bailey-Jourdain C Effects of conspecific associations on size at sex change in three species of calyptraeid gastropods 89-97 Bergquist DC, Fleckenstein C, Knisel J, Begley B, MacDonald IR, Fisher CR Variations in seep mussel bed communities along physical and chemical environmental gradients..99-108 Michaelidis B, Ouzounis C, Paleras A, Pörtner HO Effects of long-term moderate hypercapnia on acid-base balance and growth rate in marine mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis ....................................................................................................... 109-118 Hentschel BT, Larson AA Growth rates of interface-feeding polychaetes: combined effects of flow speed and suspended food concentration...................................................................................................................................... 119-129 Olesen M, Strake S, Andrushaitis A Egestion of non-pellet-bound fecal material from the copepod Acartia tonsa: implication for vertical flux and degradation ..........................................................................................................................131-142 Defeo O, Gómez J Morphodynamics and habitat safety in sandy beaches: life-history adaptations in a supralittoral amphipod ...........................................................................................................................................143-153 Botto F, Valiela I, Iribarne O, Martinetto P, Alberti J Impact of burrowing crabs on C and N sources, control, and transformations in sediments and food webs of SW Atlantic estuaries ...........................................................................................................155-164 Werry J, Lee SY Grapsid crabs mediate link between mangrove litter production and estuarine planktonic food chains.................................................................................................................................................165-176 Petrone C, Jancaitis LB, Jones MB, Natunewicz CC, Tilburg CE, Epifanio CE Dynamics of larval patches: spatial distribution of fiddler crab larvae in Delaware Bay and adjacent waters.................................................................................................................................................177-190 Käkelä R, Käkelä A, Kahle S, Becker PH, Kelly A, Furness RW Fatty acid signatures in plasma of captive herring gulls as indicators of demersal or pelagic fish diet191-200 Shulman GE, Nikolsky VN, Yuneva TV, Minyuk GS, Shchepkin VY, Shchepkina AM, Ivleva EV, Yunev OA, Dobrovolov IS, Bingel F, Kideys AE Fat content in Black Sea sprat as an indicator of fish food supply and ecosystem condition ...........201-212 Kotake A, Okamura A, Yamada Y, Utoh T, Arai T, Miller MJ, Oka HP, Tsukamoto K Seasonal variation in the migratory history of the Japanese eel Anguilla japonica in Mikawa Bay, Japan .................................................................................................................................................213-221 Bath Martin G, Thorrold SR Temperature and salinity effects on magnesium, manganese, and barium incorporation in otoliths of larval and early juvenile spot Leiostomus xanthurus .........................................................................223-232 Hurst TP, Spencer ML, Sogard SM, Stoner AW Compensatory growth, energy storage and behavior of juvenile Pacific halibut Hippoglossus stenolepis following thermally induced growth reduction................................................................... 233-240 Caldarone EM Estimating growth in haddock larvae Melanogrammus aeglefinus from RNA:DNA ratios and water temperature........................................................................................................................................ 241-252 Ruxton GD, Bailey DM Combining motility and bioluminescent signalling aids mate finding in deep-sea fish: a simulation study...................................................................................................................................................253-262 Storch S, Wilson RP, Hillis-Starr ZM, Adelung D Cold-blooded divers: temperature-dependent dive performance in the wild hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata......................................................................................................................263-271 Bailleul F, Luque S, Dubroca L, Arnould JPY, Guinet C Differences in foraging strategy and maternal behaviour between two sympatric fur seal species at the Crozet Islands ..............................................................................................................................273-282 Page B, McKenzie J, Goldsworthy SD Dietary resource partitioning among sympatric New Zealand and Australian fur seals ....................283-302 NOTE Kvitek R, Bretz C

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Shorebird foraging behavior, diet, and abundance vary with harmful algal bloom toxin concentrations in invertebrate prey.................................................................................................... 303-309 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES Vol. 294, 2005. FEATURE ARTICLE Wanless S, Harris MP, Redman P, Speakman JR Low energy values of fish as a probable cause of a major seabird breeding failure in the North Sea...... 1-8 RESEARCH ARTICLE Gattuso JP, Dawson NA, Duarte CM, Middelburg JJ Patterns of publication effort in coastal biogeochemistry: a bibliometric survey (1971 to 2003)............. 9-22 von Dassow YJ, Strathmann RR Full of eggs and no place to lay them: hidden cost of benthic development......................................... 23-34 Karlson K, Hulth S, Ringdahl K, Rosenberg R Experimental recolonisation of Baltic Sea reduced sediments: survival of benthic macrofauna and effects on nutrient cycling ......................................................................................................................35-49 Fitzsimons MF, Dawit M, Revitt DM, Rocha C Effects of early tidal inundation on the cycling of methylamines in inter-tidal sediments ......................51-61 Sargian P, Mostajir B, Chatila K, Ferreyra GA, Pelletier E, Demers S Non-synergistic effects of water-soluble crude oil and enhanced ultraviolet-B radiation on a natural plankton assemblage .............................................................................................................................63-77 Craig JK, Crowder LB Hypoxia-induced habitat shifts and energetic consequences in Atlantic croaker and brown shrimp on the Gulf of Mexico shelf .................................................................................................................... 79-94 Yunev OA, Moncheva S, Carstensen J Long-term variability of vertical chlorophyll a and nitrate profiles in the open Black Sea: eutrophication and climate change ...................................................................................................... 95-107 Lam C, Harder T, Qian PY Growth conditions of benthic diatoms affect quality and quantity of extracellular polymeric larval settlement cues.................................................................................................................................. 109-116 Lever MA, Valiela I Response of microphytobenthic biomass to experimental nutrient enrichment and grazer exclusion at different land-derived nitrogen loads .............................................................................................117-129 Schwarz AM, Hawes I, Andrew N, Mercer S, Cummings V, Thrush S Primary production potential of non-geniculate coralline algae at Cape Evans, Ross Sea, Antarctica131-140 Amsler CD, Iken K, McClintock JB, Amsler MO, Peters KJ, Hubbard JM, Furrow FB, Baker BJ Comprehensive evaluation of the palatability and chemical defenses of subtidal macroalgae from the Antarctic Peninsula ......................................................................................................................141-159 Tyler AC, McGlathery KJ, Macko SA Uptake of urea and amino acids by the macroalgae Ulva lactuca (Chlorophyta) and Gracilaria vermiculophylla (Rhodophyta) ...........................................................................................................161-172 Kuntz NM, Kline DI, Sandin SA, Rohwer F Pathologies and mortality rates caused by organic carbon and nutrient stressors in three Caribbean coral species ...................................................................................................................................... 173-180 Shenkar N, Fine M, Loya Y Size matters: bleaching dynamics of the coral Oculina patagonica ............. 181-188 | Full text in pdf format Rutherford LD Jr, Thuesen EV Metabolic performance and survival of medusae in estuarine hypoxia.............................................189-200 Scheinberg RD, Landry MR, Calbet A Grazing of two common appendicularians on the natural prey assemblage of a tropical coastal ecosystem..........................................................................................................................................201-212 Carr SD, Hench JL, Luettich RA Jr, Forward RB Jr, Tankersley RA Spatial patterns in the ovigerous Callinectes sapidus spawning migration: results from a coupled behavioral-physical model .................................................................................................................213-226 Cox C, Hunt JH

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Change in size and abundance of Caribbean spiny lobsters Panulirus argus in a marine reserve in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, USA............................................................................227-239 McClanahan TR, Graham NAJ Recovery trajectories of coral reef fish assemblages within Kenyan marine protected areas ..........241-248 Takagi Y, Tohse H, Murayama E, Ohira T, Nagasawa H Diel changes in endolymph aragonite saturation rate and mRNA expression of otolith matrix proteins in the trout otolith organ ....................................................................................................... 249-256 Smith TM, Hindell JS Assessing effects of diel period, gear selectivity and predation on patterns of microhabitat use by fish in a mangrove dominated system in SE Australia ...................................................................... 257-270 Womble JN, Willson MF, Sigler MF, Kelly BP, VanBlaricom GR Distribution of Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus in relation to spring-spawning fish in SE Alaska271-282 Staniland IJ, Pond DW Investigating the use of milk fatty acids to detect dietary changes: a comparison with faecal analysis in Antarctic fur seals...........................................................................................................................283-294 REVIEW Franks PJS Plankton patchiness, turbulent transport and spatial spectra ............................................................295-309 Erratum Kraus et al., Vol. 291:301-305 (2005)....................................................................................................... 310 PROCEEDINGS OF BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON Vol. 118, No. 2, June 2005. Ophiotaenia calamensis, a new species of proteocephalid tapeworm from the Andean aquatic frog Telmatobius dankoi (Leptodactylidae) Sonia Puga and J. Ramón Formas........................................................................................................... 245 Progoniada oahuensis, a new species from Oahu, Hawaii (Annelida: Polychaeta: Goniadidae) Brendan M. Barrett and Julie H. Bailey-Brock .......................................................................................... 251 Eunice colombia (Eunicidae: Polychaeta), a new species from the southern Caribbean Néstor E. Ardila, Kristian Fauchald, and Patricia Lattig............................................................................ 259 A new marine species of Tubificoides (Annelida: Oligochaeta: Tubificidae) from Hawaii, U.S.A. Christer Erséus, Olav Giere, Jennifer Dreyer, and Julie H. Bailey-Brock................................................. 264 Two new Diastylidae (Crustacea: Cumacea) from California, collected by the R/V Velero IV Sarah Gerken............................................................................................................................................ 270 New species and new records of weckeliid amphipod crustaceans (Hadziidae) from caves in northern Mexico, with descriptions of the new genera Paraholsingerius and Tamaweckelia Thomas R. Sawicki and John R. Holsinger .............................................................................................. 285 Paratya boninensis, a new species of freshwater shrimp (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae) from Ogasawara, Japan Kiyoshi Satake and Yixiong Cai................................................................................................................ 306 On a small collection of atyid shrimps from cave Lakata Zafera, western Madagascar, with a description of a new species (Decapoda: Atyidae) Yixiong Cai ................................................................................................................................................ 312 On two species of euxanthine crabs from the South China Sea, inc1uding a description of a new species of Crosnierius (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae) Peter K. L. Ng and H.-L. Chen.................................................................................................................. 319 Cambarus (Tubericambarus) polychromatus (Decapoda: Cambaridae), a new species of crayfish from the United States Roger F. Thoma, Raymond F. Jezerinac, and Thomas P. Simon............................................................ 326 A new species of the genus Anelpistina (Insecta: Zygentoma: Nicoletiidae) from Peru Luis Espinasa............................................................................................................................................ 337 Cocculinid and pseudococculinid limpets (Gastropoda: Cocculiniformia) from off the Caribbean coast of Colombia Néstor E. Ardila and M. G. Harasewych .................................................................................................. 344 The ronquils: a review of the North Pacific fish family Bathymasteridae (Actinopterygii: Perciformes: Zoarcoidei) Duane E. Stevenson and Ann C. Matarese.............................................................................................. 367

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The Northern Snakehead Channa argus (Anabantomorpha: Channidae), a non-indigenous fish species in the Potomac River, U.S.A. Thomas M. Orrell and Lee Weigt.............................................................................................................. 407 Relationships of sauries and needlefishes (Teleostei: Scomberesocoidea) to the internally fertilizing halfbeaks (Zenarchopteridae) based on the pharyngeal jaw apparatus Neil C. Aschliman, Ian R. Tibbetts, and Bruce B. Collette........................................................................ 416 Bolivian glass frogs (Anura: Centrolenidae) with a description of a new species from Amazonia Michael B. Harvey and Brice P. Noonan .................................................................................................. 428 A new species of Lonchophylla Thomas (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) from Ecuador Luis Albuja V. and Alfred L. Gardner ........................................................................................................ 442 A new species of Macrotarsomys (Rodentia: Muridae: Nesomyinae) from southwestern Madagascar Steven M. Goodman and Voahangy Soarimalala..................................................................................... 450 Rails (Aves: Rallidae: Gallirallus) from prehistoric sites in the Kingdom of Tonga, inc1uding a description of a new species Jeremy J. Kirchman and David W. Steadman.......................................................................................... 465 SCIENTIA MARINA Vol. 69, No. 2, June 2005 RESEARCH ARTICLES Cózar, A. and F. Echevarría. Size structure of the planktonic community in microcosms with different levels of turbulence Meirelles, C.A.O. and H. Matthews-Cascon. Spawn and larval development of Pleuroploca aurantiaca (Lamarck, 1816) (Gastropoda: Fasciolariidae) from northeast Brazil Deickert, A. and G. Bello. Egg masses of Sepietta oweniana (Cephalopoda: Sepiolidae) collected in the Catalan Sea Salman, A. and V. Laptikhovsky. Fecundity and spawning of Abralia verany (Rüppell, 1844) (Cephalopoda: Enoploteuthidae) in the Aegean Sea Seixas, S. and G.J. Pierce. Vanadium, rubidium and potassium in Octopus vulgaris (Mollusca: Cephalopoda) Katsanevakis, S. Habitat use by the pearly razorfish, Xyrichtys novacula(Pisces: Labridae) Tsikliras, A.C., E.T. Koutrakis and K.I. Stergiou. Age and growth of round sardinella (Sardinella aurita) in the northeastern Mediterranean La Mesa, M., M. Sinopoli and F. Andaloro. Age and growth rate of juvenile bluefin tuna Thunnus thynnus from the Mediterranean Sea (Sicily, Italy) Palomera, I., M.P. Olivar and B. Morales-Nin. Larval development and growth of the European hake Merluccius merluccius in the northwestern Mediterranean Assis, C.A. The utricular otoliths, lapilli, of teleosts: their morphology and relevance for species identification and systematics studies Afonso-Dias, I., C. Reis and J.P. Andrade. Reproductive aspects of Microchirus azevia (Risso, 1810) (Pisces: Soleidae) from the south coast of Portugal Voges, E., A. Gordoa and J.G. Field. Dynamics of the Namibian hake fleet and management connotations: application of the ideal free distribution Arancibia, H. and S. Neira. Long-term changes in the mean trophic level of Central Chile fishery landings Broadhurst, M.K., D.J. Young, C.A. Gray and M.E.L. Wooden. Improving selection in south eastern Australian whiting (Sillago spp.) trawls: effects of modifying the body, extension and codend Karakassis, I., P. Pitta and M.D. Krom. Contribution of fish farming to the nutrient loading of the Mediterranean SENCKENBERGIANA MARITIMA Vol. 35, No.1 , March 2005 Inhalt: Ilaria Mazzini: Taxonomy, biogeography and ecology of Quaternary benthic Ostracoda (Crustacea) from circumpolar deep water of the Emerald Basin (Southern Ocean) and the S Tasman Rise (Tasman Sea) ....................................................................................................................................... 1–119

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Thomas Götte & Detlev K. Richter: Kathodolumineszenztypisierung rezenter Quarzsande von Wangerooge. [Cathodoluminescence typisation of quartz in sand sediments from Wangerooge Island]................................................................................................................................................ 121–131 Alper Dogan, Melih Ertan Çinar, Mesut Önen, Zeki Ergen & Tuncer Katagan: Seasonal dynamics of soft bottom zoobenthic communities in polluted and unpolluted areas of Izmir Bay (Aegean Sea). 133–145 WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT Vol. 13, No. 2, April 2005 Structure of a unique inland mangrove forest assemblage in fossil lagoons on the Caribbean Coast of Mexico..........................................................................................................................................111 - 122 Ana Laura Lara-Domínguez, John W. Day, Guillermo Villalobos Zapata, et al. The bulk hydraulic conductivity of mangrove soil perforated with animal burrows..........................123 - 133 Adi Susilo and Peter V. Ridd Effects of temporary desiccation on the mobility of phosphorus and metals in sulphur-rich fens: differential responses of sediments and consequences for water table management....................135 - 148 E.C.H.E.T. Lucassen, A.J.P. Smolders, J.G.M. Roelofs Modification of saltmarsh for mosquito control in Australia alters habitat use by nekton ................149 - 161 Rod M. Connolly Response of wetland plant species to hydrologic conditions ..........................................................163 - 181 Teresa K. Magee and Mary E. Kentula The importance of temporal dynamics of edge effect in reedbed design: a 12-year study on five bird species .............................................................................................................................................183 - 189 András Báldi Clonal growth of Typha domingensis Pers., subject to drawdowns and interference of Eleocharis mutata (L.) Roem. et Schult. in a tropical coastal lagoon (Brazil)....................................................191 - 198 Cleber Palma-Silva, Edélti Faria Albertoni, Francisco de Assis Esteves Trace metals in mangrove seedlings: role of iron plaque formation................................................199 - 206 Wilson Machado, Bruno B. Gueiros, Sebastião D. Lisboa-Filho, et al. ZOOLOGIA SCRIPTA Vol. 34, No. 4 Microanatomy of the radius and lifestyle in amniotes (Vertebrata, Tetrapoda) ........................................ 335 Damien Germain, Michel Laurin A new cryptic species of pond turtle from southern Italy, the hottest spot in the range of the genus Emys (Reptilia, Testudines, Emydidae).................................................................................................... 351 Uwe Fritz, Tiziano Fattizzo, Daniela Guicking, Sandro Tripepi, Maria Grazia Pennisi, Peter Lenk, Ulrich Joger, Michael Wink Phylogenetic review of the Chinese species of Acanthacorydalis (Megaloptera, Corydalidae)............... 373 Xing Yue Liu, Ding Yang, Si Qin Ge, Xing Ke Yang Revision and phylogenetic analysis of American ethicus and rupununi groups of Anelosimus (Araneae, Theridiidae) .............................................................................................................................. 389 Ingi Agnarsson Evaluation of ITS rDNA as a complement to mitochondrial gene sequences for phylogenetic studies in freshwater mussels: an example using Unionidae from north-western Europe ................................... 415 Mari Källersjö, Ted von Proschwitz, Stefan Lundberg, Pia Eldenäs, Christer Erséus Molecular phylogeny of gill monogeneans (Platyhelminthes, Monogenea, Dactylogyridae) and colonization of Indo-West Pacific butterflyfish hosts (Perciformes, Chaetodontidae) .............................. 425 Laetitia Plaisance, D. Timothy J. Littlewood, Peter D. Olson, Serge Morand Identification, characterization and phylogenetic signal of an elongation factor-1 alpha fragment in demosponges (Metazoa, Porifera, Demospongiae) ................................................................................. 437 Dirk Erpenbeck, Johannes A. J. Breeuwer, Rob W. M. van Soest