Division of Academic Affairs New Degree Program Approval Routing and Signature Form

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Division of Academic Affairs New Degree Program Approval Routing and Signature Form Division of Academic Affairs New Degree Program Approval Routing and Signature Form Proposed Program Title: ______________________________ CIP: _____________________________ Degree Level: ______________________________ Department: ______________________________ _____________________ _____________ Chair/Director’s Signature Date College: __________________________________ _____________________ _____________ Dean’s Signature Date Academic Affairs: ____________________________________________________ _____________ Associate Provost for Programs and Assessment’s Signature Date ____________________________________________________ _____________ Associate Provost for Planning and Budget’s Signature Date Team for Assurance of Student Learning (TASL): ___________________________ _____________ Committee Chair’s Signature Date Undergraduate Studies: ______________________________________________ _____________ Dean’s Signature (For Undergraduate Degree) Date Graduate College: ___________________________________________________ _____________ Dean’s Signature (For Graduate Degree) Date UFS – GPC or UPC [circle one]: _________________________________________ _____________ Chair’s Signature Date UFS – Academic Planning and Budget: __________________________________ _____________ Chair’s Signature Date University Faculty Senate: ____________________________________________ _____________ UFS President’s Signature Date Provost: ___________________________________________________________ _____________ Provost’s Signature Date Department/School College Academic TASL Affairs Undergrad. Graduate Studies College UPC GPC UFS Academic Budget & Planning UFS Steering UFS Provost CASA BOT BOG Memorandum To: University Program Committee From: Sarah Milton and Peter McCarthy, Co-Directors, M.S. Program in Marine Science and Oceanography Subject: Proposal to add new M.S. Program in Marine Science and Oceanography Date: January 6, 2017 This memo requests approval for the creation of a new Master’s Degree program in Marine Science and Oceanography (MS-MSO). This is an interdisciplinary program designed to provide students with specialized training in Marine Science and Oceanography jointly administered by the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science and Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute. Completion of the MS-MSO degree will provide Master’s level graduate students with a broad understanding of coastal and oceanographic science, along with the research and inquiry skills necessary to independently conduct research and answer questions within their area of specialization. They should be well situated to enter the workforce ready to apply their skills to research, management and administrative questions related to coastal and oceanographic issues in research, education, government, private sector consulting and non-profit organizations. MS-MSO graduates will also be well positioned to enter the Integrative Biology-MSO track that is being put forward simultaneously with this request. The incorporation of HBOI faculty into the program will grant students an unprecedented opportunity to work directly with world class researchers in their labs and in the field. There has not been a science degree program that focused specifically on coastal and marine issues in the past, nor has there been a large selection of graduate courses offered on these topics. This track will also foster collaboration between HBOI and existing strengths at FAU in marine biology and geoscience. MS-MSO faculty are active in research and community engagement, as the expanding human population both in South Florida and worldwide is generating a need for a better understanding of coupled natural-human systems. Areas of expertise include but are not limited to: water quality issues, hydrology, marine ecology, biogeochemical cycling, both endangered and invasive species, harmful algal blooms, and urbanization. FAU marine scientists have expertise in coastal ecosystems that are of economic importance including coral reefs, estuaries, coastal marshes and mangroves, lagoonal systems, beaches, and shallow banks, as well as ecosystems of the open oceans. Primary research locations include Florida, the Bahamas, and the Caribbean. The FAU Departments of Biological Sciences and Geoscience have individual strengths in marine and coastal sciences, with coursework in biology ranging from Marine Invertebrate Zoology to Introduction to Marine Biotechnology, and in Geosciences from GIS to Shore Erosion and Protection to Environmental Geophysics. However, the addition of coursework taught by HBOI faculty, including courses in Physical & Geological Oceanography and Biological and Chemical Oceanography, and specialized courses in such areas as Underwater Optical Imaging and Ocean Monitoring Systems will greatly increase the course offerings in Marine Science and most importantly, promote cross-disciplinary training that will enable students to face the complex challenges of 21st century science. These areas fit directly into the new FAU Strategic Plan with clear links to the pillars of Ocean Science and Engineering/Environmental Science, Community Engagement and Economic Development, and Sensing and Smart Systems. The attached document provides a catalog description of the proposed MS degree in Marine Science and Oceanography which is being submitted for approval simultaneously with this memo. The MS MSO track will use existing courses currently approved and no new courses need to be developed or approved to create all the required courses and learning experiences for this track. All faculty teaching are already members of the Graduate Faculty at Florida Atlantic University and are already teaching approved courses and mentoring both MS and Ph.D. students. We are also requesting that this track appears on student transcripts as the Major under Curriculum Information. See the below example. Curriculum Information Current Program Master of Science Program: Master of Science in Marine Science and Oceanography College: C.E. Schmidt College of Science Major: Marine Science and Oceanography Master of Science with Major in Marine Science and Oceanography This is an interdisciplinary program designed to provide students with specialized training in Marine Science and Oceanography jointly administered by the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science and Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute. Participating faculty have appointments at HBOI and the College of Science. Students are required to take most of the coursework spread across the core subject areas listed below. The exact courses taken are to be determined by students and their advisory committees. The application deadline is March 15 for the fall semester. Admissions Requirements In addition to meeting all of the University and College admission requirements for graduate study, each applicant for the M.S. MSO program must: 1. Have a minimum of 3.0 GPA (B or better average) on the last 60 hours of undergraduate credits, or established graduate level proficiency. 2. Provide two letters of recommendation, 3. Have minimum GRE scores of 151 Verbal and 151 Quantitative for GREs taken during or after August 2011 (or a cumulative score of 1000 on the Verbal and Quantitative portions of the GRE prior to Oct 2011). GRE scores older than 5 years prior to admission will not be accepted. 4. Obtain a "sponsor" from within the faculty of the M.S. MSO program, who will then act as the student’s advisor until a thesis topic has been chosen. For sponsor selection suggestions, go to the departmental web pages to examine the fields and interests of individual faculty. When you find a faculty member in your field of interest, contact them directly. Your application package must contain a signed sponsor form from the faculty member. Thesis Option A student curriculum consists of a minimum of 37 credits taken in the following three categories: Required Courses: Three courses (7 credits) are required of all M.S. MSO students. They should be taken at the beginning of the graduate program. MSO Required Courses Physical & Geological Oceanography OCE 6097 3 Biological and Chemical Oceanography OCE 6057 3 Geosciences Colloquium Series GEO 6920 1 Total Research Core 7 Core Subject Areas and Electives: 24 credits from the core subject areas and electives, with at least one course from each of four different core subject areas. Up to 6 credits designated as “Special Topics” courses may be taken with the approval of the Thesis Advisor. No more than 6 credits of electives taken outside the core areas will be counted toward the degree. No courses under the 5000 level may be taken. No more than 3 credits of Directed Independent Study may be counted toward this degree. Thesis: 3 to 6 credits. Non-Thesis Option A student curriculum consists of a minimum of 37 credits taken in the following three categories: Required Courses: Three courses (7 credits) are required of all M.S. MSO students. They should be taken at the beginning of the graduate program. MSO Required Courses Physical & Geological Oceanography OCE 6097 3 Biological and Chemical Oceanography OCE 6057 3 Colloquium GEO 6920 1 Total Research Core 7 Core Subject Areas: A minimum of 24 credits from the core subject areas, with at least one course from each of four different core subject areas. Up to 6 credits designated as “Special Topics” courses may be taken with the approval of the student’s Advisor. Electives and Directed Independent Study: No more than 6 credits of electives taken outside the core areas will be counted toward the degree.
Recommended publications
  • From the National Park La Restinga, Isla Margarita, Venezuela Biota Neotropica, Vol
    Biota Neotropica ISSN: 1676-0611 [email protected] Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade Brasil Moreira Rocha, Rosana; Guerra-Castro, Edlin; Lira, Carlos; Marquez Pauls, Sheila; Hernández, Ivan; Pérez, Adriana; Sardi, Adriana; Pérez, Jeannette; Herrera, César; Carbonini, Ana Karinna; Caraballo, Virginia; Salazar, Dioceline; Diaz, Maria Cristina; Cruz-Motta, Juan José Inventory of ascidians (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) from the National Park La Restinga, Isla Margarita, Venezuela Biota Neotropica, vol. 10, núm. 1, 2010, pp. 209-218 Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade Campinas, Brasil Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=199115789021 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative Biota Neotrop., vol. 10, no. 1 Inventory of ascidians (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) from the National Park La Restinga, Isla Margarita, Venezuela Rosana Moreira Rocha1,11, Edlin Guerra-Castro2, Carlos Lira3, Sheila Marquez Pauls4, Ivan Hernández5, Adriana Pérez3, Adriana Sardi6, Jeannette Pérez6, César Herrera6, Ana Karinna Carbonini7, Virginia Caraballo3, Dioceline Salazar8, Maria Cristina Diaz9 & Juan José Cruz-Motta6,10 1 Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Paraná – UFPR, CP 19020, CEP 82531-980 Curitiba, PR, Brasil 2Centro de Ecología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, CP 21827, Caracas 1020-A,
    [Show full text]
  • From the National Park La Restinga, Isla Margarita, Venezuela
    Biota Neotrop., vol. 10, no. 1 Inventory of ascidians (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) from the National Park La Restinga, Isla Margarita, Venezuela Rosana Moreira Rocha1,11, Edlin Guerra-Castro2, Carlos Lira3, Sheila Marquez Pauls4, Ivan Hernández5, Adriana Pérez3, Adriana Sardi6, Jeannette Pérez6, César Herrera6, Ana Karinna Carbonini7, Virginia Caraballo3, Dioceline Salazar8, Maria Cristina Diaz9 & Juan José Cruz-Motta6,10 1 Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Paraná – UFPR, CP 19020, CEP 82531-980 Curitiba, PR, Brasil 2Centro de Ecología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, CP 21827, Caracas 1020-A, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 3Laboratorio de Zoología, Universidad de Oriente, Núcleo de Nueva Esparta, Escuela de Ciencias Aplicadas del Mar, CP 658, Porlamar 6301, Isla Margarita, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] 4Instituto de Zoologia Tropical, Escuela de Biologia, Universidad Central de Venezuela, CP 47058, Caracas 1041, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 5Departamento de Ciencias, Universidad de Oriente, Núcleo de Nueva Esparta, Guatamara, Isla de Margarita, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 6Laboratorio de Ecología Experimental, Universidad Simón Bolívar, CP 89000, Sartenejas, Caracas 1080, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] 7Laboratorio de Biología Marina, Universidad Simón Bolívar, CP 89000, Sartenejas, Caracas 1080, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 8Departamento de Biología, Escuela de Ciencias, Universidad de Oriente, Núcleo de Sucre, CP 245, CEP 6101,Cumaná, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 9Museo Marino de Margarita, Bulevar El Paseo, Boca del Río, Margarita, Edo. Nueva Esparta, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 10Departamento de Estudios Ambientales, Universidad Simón Bolívar, CP 89000, Sartenejas, Caracas 1080, Venezuela, e-mail: [email protected] 11Corresponding author: Rosana Moreira Rocha, e-mail: [email protected] ROCHA, R.M., GUERRA-CASTRO, E., LIRA, C., PAUL, S.M., HERNÁNDEZ.
    [Show full text]
  • Decapoda: Brachyura)
    ^^z^ JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY, 16(3): 556-563, 1996 r PARTIAL REVISION OF PINNOTHERID CRAB GENERA WITH A TWO-SEGMENTED PALP ON THE THIRD MAXILLIPED (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA) Ernesto Campos ABSTRACT Two new genera in the Pinnotheridae are recognized from the northwestern Atlantic, Gem- motheres, new genus (type species Pinnotheres chamae Roberts, 1975) and Tunicotheres, new genus (type species Pinnotheres moseri Rathbun, 1918). These genera shared a 2-segmented palp on the third maxilliped with Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990, Dissodactylus Smith, 1870, Ostracotheres H. Milne Edwards, 1853, and Xanthasia White, 1846. They differ in shape, texture, and hardness of the carapace, shape and relative length of third maxilliped articles, relative length of the walking legs, and relative length and shape of their articles. Comparisons among these genera are provided in a dichotomous key based on adult female characters. During the last five years I have studied Museum, Leiden, and Museum National d'Histoire the systematics of a subgroup of pinnothe- Naturelle, Paris; and Calyptraeotheres granti (Glassell, 1933), O. subglobosus (Baker, 1907), O. holothuriensis rid crabs which are characterized by a two- (Baker, 1907), Epulotheres sp., and other genera with segmented palp on the third maxilliped a three-segmented palp (see Campos, 1993; Manning, (lacking a dactylus). The first result of this 1993a), including P. pisum (Linnaeus, 1767) (type spe­ study was the erection of the genus Calyp­ cies of Pinnotheres Bosc, 1802), from the Inverte­ traeotheres Campos, 1990 (type species brates Collection, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autonoma de Baja California, Mexico. Original figures Fabia granti Glassell, 1933) from the Mex­ were made with a camera lucida.
    [Show full text]
  • Phylogeny of the Genus Pinnixa White, 1846
    DIRECTEUR DE LA PUBLICATION : Bruno David Président du Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle RÉDACTRICE EN CHEF / EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Laure Desutter-Grandcolas ASSISTANTS DE RÉDACTION / ASSISTANT EDITORS : Anne Mabille ([email protected]) MISE EN PAGE / PAGE LAYOUT : Anne Mabille COMITÉ SCIENTIFIQUE / SCIENTIFIC BOARD : James Carpenter (AMNH, New York, États-Unis) Maria Marta Cigliano (Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentine) Henrik Enghoff (NHMD, Copenhague, Danemark) Rafael Marquez (CSIC, Madrid, Espagne) Peter Ng (University of Singapore) Norman I. Platnick (AMNH, New York, États-Unis) Jean-Yves Rasplus (INRA, Montferrier-sur-Lez, France) Jean-François Silvain (IRD, Gif-sur-Yvette, France) Wanda M. Weiner (Polish Academy of Sciences, Cracovie, Pologne) John Wenzel (The Ohio State University, Columbus, États-Unis) COUVERTURE / COVER : Morphological characters of the type species of some genera within subfamily Pinnixinae Števčić, 2005. Zoosystema est indexé dans / Zoosystema is indexed in: – Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch®) – ISI Alerting Services® – Current Contents® / Agriculture, Biology, and Environmental Sciences® – Scopus® Zoosystema est distribué en version électronique par / Zoosystema is distributed electronically by: – BioOne® (http://www.bioone.org) Les articles ainsi que les nouveautés nomenclaturales publiés dans Zoosystema sont référencés par / Articles and nomenclatural novelties published in Zoosystema are referenced by: – ZooBank® (http://zoobank.org) Zoosystema est une revue en flux continu publiée par les Publications scientifiques du Muséum, Paris / Zoosystema is a fast track journal published by the Museum Science Press, Paris Les Publications scientifiques du Muséum publient aussi / The Museum Science Press also publish: Adansonia, Geodiversitas, Anthropozoologica, European Journal of Taxonomy, Naturae, Cryptogamie sous-sections Algologie, Bryologie, Mycologie. Diffusion – Publications scientifiques Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle CP 41 – 57 rue Cuvier F-75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) Tél.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Publication
    Pinnotheridae de Haan, 1833 Juan Ignacio González-Gordillo and Jose A. Cuesta Leaflet No. 191 I April 2020 ICES IDENTIFICATION LEAFLETS FOR PLANKTON FICHES D’IDENTIFICATION DU ZOOPLANCTON ICES INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE EXPLORATION OF THE SEA CIEM CONSEIL INTERNATIONAL POUR L’EXPLORATION DE LA MER International Council for the Exploration of the Sea Conseil International pour l’Exploration de la Mer H. C. Andersens Boulevard 44–46 DK-1553 Copenhagen V Denmark Telephone (+45) 33 38 67 00 Telefax (+45) 33 93 42 15 www.ices.dk [email protected] Series editor: Antonina dos Santos and Lidia Yebra Prepared under the auspices of the ICES Working Group on Zooplankton Ecology (WGZE) This leaflet has undergone a formal external peer-review process Recommended format for purpose of citation: González-Gordillo, J. I., and Cuesta, J. A. 2020. Pinnotheridae de Haan, 1833. ICES Identification Leaflets for Plankton No. 191. 17 pp. http://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.5961 The material in this report may be reused for non-commercial purposes using the recommended citation. ICES may only grant usage rights of information, data, images, graphs, etc. of which it has ownership. For other third-party material cited in this report, you must contact the original copyright holder for permission. For citation of datasets or use of data to be included in other databases, please refer to the latest ICES data policy on the ICES website. All extracts must be acknowledged. For other reproduction requests please contact the General Secretary. This document is the product of an expert group under the auspices of the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea and does not necessarily represent the view of the Council.
    [Show full text]
  • Phylogeny of Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae) with the Description of C
    Zootaxa 2691: 41–52 (2010) ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ Article ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2010 · Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) Phylogeny of Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae) with the description of C. pepeluisi new species from the tropical Mexican Pacific ERNESTO CAMPOS1, 3 & IVÁN HERNÁNDEZ-ÁVILA2 1Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Apartado Postal 296, Ensenada, 22800 Baja California, México. E-mail: [email protected] 2Departamento de Ciencias, Unidad de Cursos Básicos y Grupo de Investigación en Carcinología, Universidad de Oriente, Margarita Island, Venezuela 3Corresponding author Abstract A reassessment of the adult and larval morphology as well as comparison with published molecular information confirms the monophyly of the genus Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990, and its relationship with Dissodactylus Smith, 1870, Clypeasterophilus Campos & Griffith, 1990 and Tumidotheres Campos, 1990. Calyptraeotheres pepeluisi new species, is described from Michoacán, Mexico on the basis of a female specimen. The new species is distinguished from the other nominal species of the genus by having a subarcuate carapace with longer setae on its front and anterolateral margin, the eyes are dorsally visible, and a third maxilliped with a 2-segmented palp and a conical propodus. Key words: Decapoda, Crustacea, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae, Calyptraeotheres, phylogeny, new species, Mexico Introduction The genus Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990 comprises four species of pinnotherid crabs associated with limpets of the superfamily Calyptraeidea (Crepidula Lamarck, 1799, Calyptraea Lamarck, 1799 and Crucibulum Schumacher, 1817) (see Campos 1990, 1999; Hernández-Ávila & Campos 2006). Among the pinnotherids deposited in the National Crustacean Collection of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico (CNCR), the first author discovered an ovigerous female that was collected off the coast of Michoacán, in the Pacific coast of Mexico.
    [Show full text]
  • Periclimenes Paivai on the Scyphozoan Jellyfsh Lychnorhiza Lucerna: Probing for Territoriality and Inferring Its Mating System J
    Baeza et al. Helgol Mar Res (2017) 71:17 DOI 10.1186/s10152-017-0497-8 Helgoland Marine Research ORIGINAL ARTICLE Open Access Host‑use pattern of the shrimp Periclimenes paivai on the scyphozoan jellyfsh Lychnorhiza lucerna: probing for territoriality and inferring its mating system J. Antonio Baeza1,2,3*, Samara de Paiva Barros‑Alves4,5, Rudá Amorim Lucena6, Silvio Felipe Barbosa Lima7,8 and Douglas Fernandes Rodrigues Alves4,5 Abstract In symbiotic crustaceans, host-use patterns vary broadly. Some species inhabit host individuals solitarily, other spe‑ cies live in heterosexual pairs, and even other species live in aggregations. This disparity in host-use patterns coupled with considerable diferences in host ecology provide opportunities to explore how environmental conditions afect animal behavior. In this study, we explored whether or not symbiotic crustaceans inhabiting relatively large and structurally complex host species live in aggregations. We expected Periclimenes paivai, a small caridean shrimp that lives among the tentacles of the large and morphologically complex scyphozoan jellyfsh Lychnorhiza lucerna, to live in groups given that the host traits above constraint host-monopolization behaviors by symbiotic crustaceans. We described the population distribution of P. paivai during a bloom of L. lucerna near the mouth of the Paraíba River estuary in Paraíba, Brazil. The population distribution of P. paivai did not difer statistically from a random Poisson dis‑ tribution. Male shrimps were most often found dwelling on the surface of L. lucerna individuals as small groups (2–4 individuals), in agreement with expectations. Periclimenes paivai is a sexually dimorphic species with males attaining smaller average body sizes than females and exhibiting no elaborated weaponry (claws).
    [Show full text]
  • Larval Development of Austinixa Bragantina (Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae) Reared in the Laboratory
    Larval development of Austinixa bragantina (Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae) reared in the laboratory Jô de Farias Lima Embrapa Amapá. Rodovia Juscelino Kubitschek, km 5, Caixa Postal 10, 68903-000 Macapá, Amapá, Brasil. E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] ABSTRACT. The zoeal and megalopal stages of Austinixa bragantina Coelho, 2005, a small pinnotherid crab found in association with ghost shrimps Callichirus major (Say, 1818) and Lepidophthalmus siriboia Felder & Rodrigues, 1993 in the northeastern region of the state of Pará, Brazil, were reared in the laboratory from hatching to the megalopal stage. The duration of the larval period from hatching to megalopa was 28 days and the mean of duration for each larval stage was 6, 5, 5, 6, and 6 days, respectively. In the present study, the zoeal and megalopal stages are described and illus- trated in detail. KEY WORDS. Larval stages; larval description; Pará; Pinnotherid crab. Members of Pinnotheridae are known to spend most or MATERIAL AND METHODS all of their post-planktonic life in symbiosis with other inver- Six egg-bearing females were obtained from Ajuruteua tebrates, such as mollusks, polychaetes, annelids, ascidians, beaches, northeastern state of Pará, Brazil. In the laboratory, echinoderms, and other crustaceans (WILLIAMS 1984). Accord- all females were cleaned and monitored until hatching occurred ing to NG et al. (2008) the family is currently subdivided in two in a five liters aquarium with constant aeration. subfamilies: Pinnotheriliinae and Pinnotherinae, as well as sev- After hatching, larvae were transferred to glass contain- eral insertae sedis species. According to BEZERRA et al. (2006), in ers of 500 ml capacity (approximately 30 larvae per container) the coast of Brazil, this family is represented by 22 species dis- filled with filtered seawater and kept at room temperature in tributed across the 11 genera.
    [Show full text]
  • Southeastern Regional Taxonomic Center South Carolina Department of Natural Resources
    Southeastern Regional Taxonomic Center South Carolina Department of Natural Resources http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/sertc/ Southeastern Regional Taxonomic Center Invertebrate Literature Library (updated 9 May 2012, 4056 entries) (1958-1959). Proceedings of the salt marsh conference held at the Marine Institute of the University of Georgia, Apollo Island, Georgia March 25-28, 1958. Salt Marsh Conference, The Marine Institute, University of Georgia, Sapelo Island, Georgia, Marine Institute of the University of Georgia. (1975). Phylum Arthropoda: Crustacea, Amphipoda: Caprellidea. Light's Manual: Intertidal Invertebrates of the Central California Coast. R. I. Smith and J. T. Carlton, University of California Press. (1975). Phylum Arthropoda: Crustacea, Amphipoda: Gammaridea. Light's Manual: Intertidal Invertebrates of the Central California Coast. R. I. Smith and J. T. Carlton, University of California Press. (1981). Stomatopods. FAO species identification sheets for fishery purposes. Eastern Central Atlantic; fishing areas 34,47 (in part).Canada Funds-in Trust. Ottawa, Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, by arrangement with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, vols. 1-7. W. Fischer, G. Bianchi and W. B. Scott. (1984). Taxonomic guide to the polychaetes of the northern Gulf of Mexico. Volume II. Final report to the Minerals Management Service. J. M. Uebelacker and P. G. Johnson. Mobile, AL, Barry A. Vittor & Associates, Inc. (1984). Taxonomic guide to the polychaetes of the northern Gulf of Mexico. Volume III. Final report to the Minerals Management Service. J. M. Uebelacker and P. G. Johnson. Mobile, AL, Barry A. Vittor & Associates, Inc. (1984). Taxonomic guide to the polychaetes of the northern Gulf of Mexico.
    [Show full text]
  • Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae)
    BOLETÍN DEL CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOLÓGICAS VOLUMEN 42, NO. 1, 2008, PP. 135–142 UNIVERSIDAD DEL ZULIA, MARACAIBO, VENEZUELA LECITOTROFÍA EN EL DESARROLLO LARVAL DE TUNICOTHERES MOSERI (CRUSTACEA: BRACHYURA: PINNOTHERIDAE) JESÚS E. HERNÁNDEZ, JUAN BOLAÑOS, LEE GALINDO, CARLOS LIRA Y GONZALO HERNÁNDEZ Grupo de Investigación en Carcinología, Escuela de Ciencias Aplicadas del Mar, Universidad de Oriente, Núcleo Nueva Esparta, Apartado 147, Porlamar, Isla de Margarita, Venezuela [email protected] Resumen. La familia Pinnotheridae está constituida por especies de pequeños cangrejos que viven en simbiosis con otros invertebrados marinos. Entre ellos es Tunicotheres moseri, quien posee un desarrollo larval de dos estadios de zoea y uno de megalopa, un caso raro en crustáceos decápodos marinos. Se determinó si los diferentes estadios larvales de esta especie, durante su desarrollo, no requerían la captación e ingesta de alimento. De la cavidad atrial del tunicado Phallusia nigra fueron extraídas hembras ovígeras de T. moseri y trasladadas hasta el laboratorio. Una vez eclosionados los huevos, las larvas recién nacidas, fueron colocadas en cubiteras de 14 cubículos (1 larva por cubículo), contentivos de 25 ml de agua de mar filtrada y esterilizada con LUV. El agua fue cambiada diariamente a la vez que se efectuaba un registro de las mudas y muertes ocurridas. Se conformaron dos grupos experimentales: un primer grupo, Control, alimentado con nauplios de Artemia sp. ofrecidos ad libitum, y al segundo grupo al cual no se le suministró alimento. El análisis de varianza no arrojó diferencias significativas entre los dos grupos, con respecto a la supervivencia [F ], demostrando 0,05(3,198) que Tunicotheres moseri puede realizar su desarrollo post embrionario sin captar alimento del medio externo.
    [Show full text]
  • Abbreviated Larval Development of Tunicotheres Moseri (Rathbun, 1918) (Decapoda: Pinnotheridae), a Rare Case of Parental Care Among Brachyuran Crabs*
    sm68n3373 10/9/04 13:01 Página 373 SCI. MAR., 68 (3): 373-384 SCIENTIA MARINA 2004 Abbreviated larval development of Tunicotheres moseri (Rathbun, 1918) (Decapoda: Pinnotheridae), a rare case of parental care among brachyuran crabs* JUAN BOLAÑOS1, JOSÉ A. CUESTA2‡, GONZALO HERNÁNDEZ1, JESÚS HERNÁNDEZ1 and DARRYL L. FELDER3 1 Laboratory of Carcinology, Universidad de Oriente, Apartado 147, Porlamar, Isla de Margarita, Venezuela. 2 Instituto de Ciencias Marinas de Andalucía (CSIC), Polígono Río San Pedro, s/n. Apdo. Oficial, 11510 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain. E-mail: [email protected] 3 Department of Biology, Laboratory for Crustacean Research, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, P.O. Box 42451, Lafayette, Louisiana 70504-2451, USA. SUMMARY: Tunicotheres moseri (Rathbun, 1918) presents a rare case of post-hatching parental care not recorded previ- ously among brachyuran decapods. The complete larval development takes place within a brooding enclosure of the parental female, formed by flexure of the broad abdomen against the sternum. The first crab instar is the earliest stage observed to leave this enclosure, doing so without active help from the parental female. The development of stages preceding the first crab was investigated by in vitro culture of eggs obtained from ovigerous crabs inhabiting the atrial cavity of the tunicate Phallusia nigra Savigny, 1816, in Venezuela. Eggs were hatched in the laboratory and reared through two zoeal stages and the megalopa. Additional samples of the larval stages were obtained directly from abdominal enclosures of aquarium-held females. All larval stages were described and illustrated in detail. Morphological comparisons were made between larvae from two different populations.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Pea Crabs Found in the Chiton Tonicia Chilensis
    Zootaxa 4434 (2): 385–390 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) http://www.mapress.com/j/zt/ Correspondence ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2018 Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4434.2.11 http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8DC83B97-DA38-4024-A610-7EA6357031DF On the pea crabs found in the chiton Tonicia chilensis (Frembly, 1827) (Mollusca, Polyplacophora: Chitonidae) identified as “Orthotheres sp.” by Melzer & Schwabe (2008), and its reassignment to Calyptraeotheres Campos, 1990 (Crustacea: Pinnotheridae) ERNESTO CAMPOS Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Ensenada, Baja California, México. E-mail: [email protected] Crabs of the family Pinnotheridae have been considered a phylogenetically heterogeneous group and taxonomically problematic (Palacios-Theil 2009, 2016; Tsang et al. 2018). The lack of knowledge of sexual dimorphism and morphological variation throughout the life history for many species have complicated its taxonomy and has resulted in errors in its classification (Campos 1989, 1993, 2016). Consequently, if the taxonomy of these symbiotic crabs had been based on juveniles and undeveloped character states, the problems get even more serious (Campos 1989, 1993). Melzer & Schwabe (2008) studied three juvenile crabs living in the chiton Tonicia chilensis (Frembly, 1827) (Polyplacophora: Chitonidae) collected in Muelle Dichato, Chile, and they identified them as the putative invasive stage of a species of Orthotheres Sakai, 1969. The crabs are of the typical juvenile pinnotherid form with a masculine habitus, including a suborbicular carapace, large eyes and a slender pleon (= abdomen) with the telson well defined (Ocampo et al. 2017). Unpublished observations on juveniles and adults of several species of pinnotherid crabs by the author, for example, Juxtafabia muliniarum (Rathbun, 1918), Dissodactylus lockingtoni Glassell, 1935, D.
    [Show full text]