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DEEP SEA LEBANON RESULTS of the 2016 EXPEDITION EXPLORING SUBMARINE CANYONS Towards Deep-Sea Conservation in Lebanon Project
DEEP SEA LEBANON RESULTS OF THE 2016 EXPEDITION EXPLORING SUBMARINE CANYONS Towards Deep-Sea Conservation in Lebanon Project March 2018 DEEP SEA LEBANON RESULTS OF THE 2016 EXPEDITION EXPLORING SUBMARINE CANYONS Towards Deep-Sea Conservation in Lebanon Project Citation: Aguilar, R., García, S., Perry, A.L., Alvarez, H., Blanco, J., Bitar, G. 2018. 2016 Deep-sea Lebanon Expedition: Exploring Submarine Canyons. Oceana, Madrid. 94 p. DOI: 10.31230/osf.io/34cb9 Based on an official request from Lebanon’s Ministry of Environment back in 2013, Oceana has planned and carried out an expedition to survey Lebanese deep-sea canyons and escarpments. Cover: Cerianthus membranaceus © OCEANA All photos are © OCEANA Index 06 Introduction 11 Methods 16 Results 44 Areas 12 Rov surveys 16 Habitat types 44 Tarablus/Batroun 14 Infaunal surveys 16 Coralligenous habitat 44 Jounieh 14 Oceanographic and rhodolith/maërl 45 St. George beds measurements 46 Beirut 19 Sandy bottoms 15 Data analyses 46 Sayniq 15 Collaborations 20 Sandy-muddy bottoms 20 Rocky bottoms 22 Canyon heads 22 Bathyal muds 24 Species 27 Fishes 29 Crustaceans 30 Echinoderms 31 Cnidarians 36 Sponges 38 Molluscs 40 Bryozoans 40 Brachiopods 42 Tunicates 42 Annelids 42 Foraminifera 42 Algae | Deep sea Lebanon OCEANA 47 Human 50 Discussion and 68 Annex 1 85 Annex 2 impacts conclusions 68 Table A1. List of 85 Methodology for 47 Marine litter 51 Main expedition species identified assesing relative 49 Fisheries findings 84 Table A2. List conservation interest of 49 Other observations 52 Key community of threatened types and their species identified survey areas ecological importanc 84 Figure A1. -
Geobio-Center LMU Report 2014 / 2015
GeoBio-Center LMU LMU ReportGeoBio-Center 2014 / 2015 Report 2012 / 2013 GeoBio-CenterLMU Report 2014 / 2015 Editor: Dirk Erpenbeck, Angelo Poliseno Layout: Lydia Geißler Cover composition: Lydia Geißler GeoBio-Center LMU, Richard-Wagner-Str. 10, 80333 München http://www.geobio-center.uni-muenchen.de Contents Welcoming note ......................................................................................................................4 Achievements of the GeoBio-Center LMU members 2014 & 2015 at a glance ......................5 Members of the GeoBio-CenterLMU ........................................................................................6 Memorial to Alexander Volker Altenbach (1953-2015) ..........................................................9 Publications in ISI-indexed Journals ...................................................................................14 Other peer-reviewed Publications .......................................................................................21 Further Publications .............................................................................................................23 Grants and Stipends ............................................................................................................26 Honors and Awards ..............................................................................................................27 Presentations on Conferences and Symposia ....................................................................28 Teaching ................................................................................................................................35 -
Otago Submarine Canyons: Mapping and Macrobenthos
Otago Submarine Canyons: Mapping and Macrobenthos Bryce A. Peebles A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree of Master of Science at the University of Otago December 2013 ii Abstract Submarine canyons are steep-sided “V’ or “U” shaped valleys that incise continental slopes worldwide. The geophysical and oceanographic features of submarine canyons can produce environmental conditions that cause benthic assemblages to be distinctive and productive compared to those of the adjacent slope; however the assemblages are potentially vulnerable to anthropogenic impacts, including bottom fishing. In order to help inform policy and management, submarine canyons need to be objectively defined topographically and their benthic assemblages characterised. A canyon network occurs off the Otago Peninsula, south-eastern New Zealand, but lack of detailed bathymetric data and adequate benthic sampling has limited study of the canyons. This thesis outlines a method of defining submarine canyon areas and examines epifaunal and infaunal assemblages of the Otago canyons and adjacent slope. Objective definition of the Otago canyon network in the GIS software GRASS along with the steps to use this methodology worldwide are described. Archival count data from 1966-74 on the epifauna are analysed using the PRIMER suite of programs to characterise epifaunal assemblages. Anomurans, polychaetes, asteroids and ascidians make up 70% of the epifaunal canyon assemblage. The epifaunal assemblage is clearly defined by water depth and recognisable from 380 m. Quantitative sampling of infauna in Saunders canyon, Papanui canyon and adjacent slope was carried out to examine infaunal community structure of the canyons and adjacent slope. Infaunal canyon assemblages are dominated by polychaetes, amphipods, ophiuroids, decapods and isopods in canyons, accounting for 75% of collected individuals. -
Mollusca, Archaeogastropoda) from the Northeastern Pacific
Zoologica Scripta, Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 35-49, 1996 Pergamon Elsevier Science Ltd © 1996 The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved 0300-3256(95)00015-1 0300-3256/96 $ 15.00 + 0.00 Anatomy and systematics of bathyphytophilid limpets (Mollusca, Archaeogastropoda) from the northeastern Pacific GERHARD HASZPRUNAR and JAMES H. McLEAN Accepted 28 September 1995 Haszprunar, G. & McLean, J. H. 1995. Anatomy and systematics of bathyphytophilid limpets (Mollusca, Archaeogastropoda) from the northeastern Pacific.—Zool. Scr. 25: 35^9. Bathyphytophilus diegensis sp. n. is described on basis of shell and radula characters. The radula of another species of Bathyphytophilus is illustrated, but the species is not described since the shell is unknown. Both species feed on detached blades of the surfgrass Phyllospadix carried by turbidity currents into continental slope depths in the San Diego Trough. The anatomy of B. diegensis was investigated by means of semithin serial sectioning and graphic reconstruction. The shell is limpet like; the protoconch resembles that of pseudococculinids and other lepetelloids. The radula is a distinctive, highly modified rhipidoglossate type with close similarities to the lepetellid radula. The anatomy falls well into the lepetelloid bauplan and is in general similar to that of Pseudococculini- dae and Pyropeltidae. Apomorphic features are the presence of gill-leaflets at both sides of the pallial roof (shared with certain pseudococculinids), the lack of jaws, and in particular many enigmatic pouches (bacterial chambers?) which open into the posterior oesophagus. Autapomor- phic characters of shell, radula and anatomy confirm the placement of Bathyphytophilus (with Aenigmabonus) in a distinct family, Bathyphytophilidae Moskalev, 1978. -
In Conchological Morphology Oligocene-Miocene Lottiids (Mollusca, Patellogastropoda) Paratethys
Cainozoic Research, 7(1-2), pp. 109-117, April 2010 A in between striking convergence conchological morphology Oligocene-Miocene lottiids (Mollusca, Patellogastropoda) from the North Sea Basin and the Paratethys Olga+Yu. Anistratenko¹Adri+W. Burger² & Vitaliy+V. Anistratenko³ 1 Institute of Geological Sciences ofNationalAcademy ofSciences ofthe Ukraine, O. GontcharaSir., 55-b, 01601, Kiev, Ukraine. E-mail: [email protected] 2 P. Soutmanlaan 18, NL-1701 MC Heerhugowaard, The Netherlands. E-mail: [email protected] 3 1.1. SchmalhausenInstitute ofZoology ofNationalAcademy ofSciences ofthe Ukraine, B. Khmelnitsky Str., 15, 01601. Kiev, Ukraine. E-mail: [email protected] Received 24 February 2009; revised version accepted 14 February 2010 The protoconch and teleoconchmorphology of Patella compressiuscala Karsten, 1849 (North Sea Basin, Chattian - Langhian) is de- The Boreobliniais established for this which is characterized indicative of scribed and illustrated. new genus species by a protoconch a lecithotrophic typeof early development, lacking even a short free-swimming larval stage. The distinctness ofBoreobliniagen. nov. from other Patellogastropoda such as Tectura,Patella, and Helcionexhibiting the typical patellogastropodprotoconch types is supported also by its unusual shell structure. An amazing heterochronous convergence ofboth protoconch and teleoconch morphology between the new species from the North Sea Basin and Miocene Flexitectura subcostata (Sinzow, 1892)from the Sarmatianofthe Paratethys is shown. Detailed descriptions and SEM images of species involved are presented. KEY WORDS:- Gastropoda, Lottidae, Miocene, Europe, protoconch, new genus Introduction marine gastropods with a planktotrophic larva in their on- togeny {e.g., Bandel, 1982, 1991; Sasaki, 1998; Kahn, 2004). The characters of embryonic, larval, and juvenile Oligocene and Miocene patellogastropods from the Medi- shells can be used to reconstruct the phylogeny of some terranean and Paratethys as well as from the North Sea the of the the gastropods. -
Inventory of Mollusks from the Estuary of the Paraíba River in Northeastern Brazil
Biota Neotropica 17(1): e20160239, 2017 www.scielo.br/bn ISSN 1676-0611 (online edition) inventory Inventory of mollusks from the estuary of the Paraíba River in northeastern Brazil Silvio Felipe Barbosa Lima1*, Rudá Amorim Lucena2, Galdênia Menezes Santos3, José Weverton Souza3, Martin Lindsey Christoffersen2, Carmen Regina Guimarães4 & Geraldo Semer Oliveira4 1Universidade Federal de Campina Grande, Unidade Acadêmica de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Centro de Formação de Professores, Cajazeiras, PB, Brazil 2Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, João Pessoa, PB, Brazil 3Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Departamento de Ecologia, São Cristóvão, SE, Brazil 4Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Departamento de Biologia, São Cristóvão, SE, Brazil *Corresponding author: Silvio Felipe Lima, e-mail: [email protected] LIMA, S.F.B., LUCENA, R.A., SANTOS, G.M., SOUZA, J.W., CHRISTOFFERSEN, M.L., GUIMARÃES, C.R., OLIVEIRA, G.S. Inventory of mollusks from the estuary of the Paraíba River in northeastern Brazil. Biota Neotropica. 17(1): e20160239. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1676-0611-BN-2016-0239 Abstract: Coastal ecosystems of northeastern Brazil have important biodiversity with regard to marine mollusks, which are insufficiently studied. Here we provide an inventory of mollusks from two sites in the estuary of the Paraíba River. Mollusks were collected in 2014 and 2016 on the coast and sandbanks located on the properties of Treze de Maio and Costinha de Santo Antônio. The malacofaunal survey identified 12 families, 20 genera and 21 species of bivalves, 17 families, 19 genera and 20 species of gastropods and one species of cephalopod. Bivalves of the family Veneridae Rafinesque, 1815 were the most representative, with a total of five species. -
Sepkoski, J.J. 1992. Compendium of Fossil Marine Animal Families
MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM Contributions . In BIOLOGY and GEOLOGY Number 83 March 1,1992 A Compendium of Fossil Marine Animal Families 2nd edition J. John Sepkoski, Jr. MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM Contributions . In BIOLOGY and GEOLOGY Number 83 March 1,1992 A Compendium of Fossil Marine Animal Families 2nd edition J. John Sepkoski, Jr. Department of the Geophysical Sciences University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois 60637 Milwaukee Public Museum Contributions in Biology and Geology Rodney Watkins, Editor (Reviewer for this paper was P.M. Sheehan) This publication is priced at $25.00 and may be obtained by writing to the Museum Gift Shop, Milwaukee Public Museum, 800 West Wells Street, Milwaukee, WI 53233. Orders must also include $3.00 for shipping and handling ($4.00 for foreign destinations) and must be accompanied by money order or check drawn on U.S. bank. Money orders or checks should be made payable to the Milwaukee Public Museum. Wisconsin residents please add 5% sales tax. In addition, a diskette in ASCII format (DOS) containing the data in this publication is priced at $25.00. Diskettes should be ordered from the Geology Section, Milwaukee Public Museum, 800 West Wells Street, Milwaukee, WI 53233. Specify 3Y. inch or 5Y. inch diskette size when ordering. Checks or money orders for diskettes should be made payable to "GeologySection, Milwaukee Public Museum," and fees for shipping and handling included as stated above. Profits support the research effort of the GeologySection. ISBN 0-89326-168-8 ©1992Milwaukee Public Museum Sponsored by Milwaukee County Contents Abstract ....... 1 Introduction.. ... 2 Stratigraphic codes. 8 The Compendium 14 Actinopoda. -
Brooding in Cocculiniform Limpets (Gastropoda) and Familial Distinctiveness of the Nucellicolidae (Copepoda): Misconceptions Reviewed from a Chitonophilid Perspective
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2002, 75, 187-217. With 16 figures Brooding in cocculiniform limpets (Gastropoda) and familial distinctiveness of the Nucellicolidae (Copepoda): misconceptions reviewed from a chitonophilid perspective RONY HUYS FLS1*, PABLO J. LÓPEZ-GONZÁLEZ2, ELISA ROLDÁN3 a n d ÁNGEL A. LUQUE3 1Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK 2Departamento de Fisiología y Zoología, Facultad de Biología, Universidad de Sevilla, Reina Mercedes, 6,41012 Sevilla, Spain 3Laboratorio de Biología Marina, Departamento de Biología, Universidad Autónoma, 28049 Madrid, Spain Received 21 January 2001; accepted for publication 16 August 2001 Nauplii, copepodids and adults of a new mesoparasitic genus and species of Chitonophilidae,Lepetellicola brescia nii, are described from the palliai cavity of a deepwater cocculiniform limpet,Lepetella sierrai, collected in the Bay of Biscay and Gulf of Cádiz. Re-examination of the type material of the recently established Nucellicolidae revealed several important observational errors in the original description, such as the oversight of the rootlet system in the adult female and misinterpretations of the tagmosis and antennulary segmentation in the late copepodid. Lamb et al.’s (1996) criteria used to justify the familial distinctiveness of the Nucellicolidae are all invalid. The family is relegated to a junior synonym of the Chitonophilidae on the basis of overwhelming support provided by copepodid and adult morphology. The impact of heterochrony on the body plan of adults and developmental stages is discussed. Phylogenetic analysis supports a basal dichotomy dividing the Chitonophilidae into a mesoparasitic clade, utilizing exclusively polyplacophoran hosts, and a sisterclade grouping genera associated with chitons, prosobranch gas tropods and cocculiniform limpets. -
Supplement – December 2017 – Survey of the Literature on Recent
A Malacological Journal ISSN 1565-1916 No. 36 - SUPPLEMENT DECEMBER 2017 2 SURVEY OF THE LITERATURE ON RECENT SHELLS FROM THE RED SEA (third enlarged and revised edition) L.J. van Gemert* Summary This literature survey lists approximately 3,050 references. Shells are being considered here as the shell bearing molluscs of the Gastropoda, Bivalvia and Scaphopoda. The area does not only comprise the Red Sea, but also the Gulf of Aden, Somalia and the Suez Canal, including the Lessepsian species in the Mediterranean Sea. Literature on fossils shells, particularly those from the Holocene, Pleistocene and Pliocene, is listed too. Introduction My interest in recent shells from the Red Sea dates from about 1996. Since then, I have been, now and then, trying to obtain information on this subject. Some years ago I decide to stop gathering data in a haphazard way and to do it more properly. This resulted in a first survey of approximately 1,420 and a second one of 2,025 references (van Gemert, 2010 & 2011). Since then, this survey has again been enlarged and revised and a number of errors have been corrected. It contains now approximately 3,050 references. Scope In principle every publication in which molluscs are reported to live or have lived in the Red Sea should be listed in the survey. This means that besides primary literature, i.e. articles in which researchers are reporting their finds for the first time, secondary and tertiary literature, i.e. reviews, monographs, books, etc are to be included too. These publications were written not only by a wide range of authors ranging from amateur shell collectors to professional malacologists but also people interested in the field of archaeology, geology, etc. -
Shells of Mollusca Collected from the Seas of Turkey
TurkJZool 27(2003)101-140 ©TÜB‹TAK ResearchArticle ShellsofMolluscaCollectedfromtheSeasofTurkey MuzafferDEM‹R Alt›ntepe,HüsniyeCaddesi,ÇeflmeSokak,2/9,Küçükyal›,Maltepe,‹stanbul-TURKEY Received:03.05.2002 Abstract: AlargenumberofmolluscanshellswerecollectedfromtheseasofTurkey(theMediterraneanSea,theAegeanSea,the SeaofMarmaraandtheBlackSea)andexaminedtodeterminetheirspeciesandtopointoutthespeciesfoundineachsea.The examinationrevealedatotalof610shellspeciesandmanyvarietiesbelongingtovariousclasses,subclasses,familiesandsub fami- liesofmollusca.ThelistofthesetaxonomicgroupsispresentedinthefirstcolumnofTable1.Thespeciesandvarietiesfou ndin eachseaareindicatedwithaplussignintheothercolumnsofthetableassignedtotheseas.Theplussignsinparenthesesi nthe BlackSeacolumnofthetableindicatethespeciesfoundinthepre-Bosphorusregionandasaspecialcasediscussedinrespect of whethertheybelongtothatseaornot. KeyWords: Shell,mollusca,sea,Turkey. TürkiyeDenizlerindenToplanm›flYumuflakçaKavk›lar› Özet: Türkiyedenizleri(Akdeniz,EgeDenizi,MarmaraDeniziveKaradeniz)’ndentoplanm›flçokmiktardayumuflakçakavk›lar›,tür- lerinitayinetmekvedenizlerinherbirindebulunmuflolantürleribelirlemekiçinincelendiler.‹nceleme,yumuflakçalar›nde¤ifl ik s›n›flar›na,alts›n›flar›na,familyalar›navealtfamilyalar›naaitolmaküzere,toplam610türvebirçokvaryeteortayaç›kard› .Butak- sonomikgruplar›nlistesiTablo1’inilksütunundasunuldu.Denizlerinherbirindebulunmuflolantürlervevaryeteler,Tablo’nundeni- zlereözgüötekisütunlar›nda,birerart›iflaretiilebelirtildiler.Tablo’nunKaradenizsütununda,paranteziçindeolanart›i -
Shells and Sea Life Formerly the Opisthobranch
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Short Communication
Biota Neotropica 16(3): e20160202, 2016 www.scielo.br/bn ISSN 1676-0611 (online edition) short communication Addisonia enodis (Vetigastropoda: Lepetelloidea) associated with an elasmobranch egg capsule from the South Atlantic Ocean and the discovery of the species from deep waters off northeastern Brazil Silvio Felipe Barbosa Lima1,3, Luiz Ricardo Lopes Simone2 & Carmen Regina Parisotto Guimarães1 1Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Departamento de Biologia, São Cristovão, SE, Brazil. 2Universidade de São Paulo, Museu de Zoologia, São Paulo, SP, Brazil. 3Corresponding author: Silvio Felipe Barbosa Lima, e-mail: [email protected] LIMA, S.F.B., SIMONE, L.R.L., GUIMARÃES, C.R.P. Addisonia enodis (Vetigastropoda: Lepetelloidea) associated with an elasmobranch egg capsule from the South Atlantic Ocean and the discovery of the species from deep waters off northeastern Brazil. Biota Neotropica. 16(3): e20160202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1676- 0611-BN-2016-0202 Abstract: A gastropod specimen of the subfamily Addisoniinae Dall, 1882 is reported here for the first time associated with an elasmobranch egg capsule from the South Atlantic Ocean. A specimen of Addisonia enodis Simone, 1996 was found living inside an egg capsule of Atlantoraja castelnaui (Miranda Ribeiro, 1907) (Arhynchobatidae Fowler, 1934) from shallow waters off southeastern Brazil. Previous studies have reported the association of members of the genus Addisonia Dall, 1882 only with the egg capsules of sharks from the family Scyliorhinidae Gill, 1862 and skates from the family Rajidae de Blainville, 1816. Other specimens of A. enodis are also here reported to occur off northeastern Brazil based on shells found in deep waters off the state of Sergipe, which fills a gap in its distribution in the Southwestern Atlantic to the north of this region.