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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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LIBROS ALONSO-RORÍGUEZ, ROSALBA, FEDERICO PAÉZ-OSUNA E ISMAEL

GÁRATE-LIZÁRRAGA, 2004. El fitoplancton en la camaronicultura y larvicultura: Importancia de un buen manejo.-- México: Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, U.N.A.M., Comité Estatal de Sanidad Acuícola de Sinaloa, 147 p.

AYRES Jr., FRANK AND ELLIOT MENDELSON, 1991. Cálculo Diferencial e

Integral. Tercera Edición.—México: McGraw-Hill/Interamericana de México, 571 p.

AYRES, GILBERT H., 1970. Análisis Químico Cuantitativo.—México: Harla, 740

p. QUIÑÓNEZ VELÁZQUEZ, CASIMIRO Y JUAN FÉLIX ELORDUY GARAY,

2004. Ambiente Y Pesquería de Pelágicos Menores en el Noroeste de México.—Instituto Politécnico Nacional, CICIMAR, 186 p.

SPIEGEL, MURRAY, R., 1970. Manual de Fórmulas y Tablas Matemáticas.

2400 fórmulas y 60 tablas.—México: McGraw-Hill, 271 p. U.N.A.M., 1992. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Imágenes de Hoy.

México: U.N.A.M., 175 p. U.N A.M., 2002. La Ciencia en la UNAM a través del Subsistema de la

Investigación Científica.—México. UNAM, Coordinación de la Investigación Científica, 141 p.

U.N.A.M., 2003. Forjadores de la Ciencia en la UNAM. Conferencias del ciclo Mi

vida en la Ciencia. Mayo-agosto de 2003.—México: UNAM, Coordinación de la Investigación Científica, 596 p.

U.N.A.M., 2004. Agenda Estadística 2004.—México: UNAM, Dirección General

de Planeación, 317 p. U.N.A.M., 2004. Cuaderno de Información Estadística Básica 1999-2003.

Difusión Cultural.—México: UNAM, Dirección General de Planeación, 111 p.

TESIS

AYALA BALDENEGRO, LEONARDO, 2004. Distribución de la concentración

de metales pesados en sedimentos y su relación con organismos indicadores (Crassostrea spp. y Mytella spp.) en el Sistema Lagunar de

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Guasave, Sinaloa. Tesis de Maestría. Instituto Politécnico Nacional, CIIDIR-Unidad Sinaloa, 73 p.

DOMÍNGUEZ AYALA, JORGE ARMANDO, 2002. Fecundidad de la langosta

espinosa Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) en el litoral de Nayarit. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 58 p.

GARCIA CONTRERAS, HUGO ALBERTO, 2004. Indice de potencial

reproductivo de la langosta Panulirus gracilis (Decapoda: Palinuridae) en la costa centro-sur de Nayarit. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 51 p.

GLUYAS MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA, 2004. Biología y dinámica poblacional

de la macarela Scomber japonicus del Golfo de California. Tesis de Doctorado. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Facultad de Ciencias, División de Estudios de Posgrado, 151 p.

GONZÁLEZ MORENO, BLANCA ROSA, 2002. Madurez sexual durante la

actividad reproductiva de la langosta Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) en las costas de Sinaloa, México (1990-1991). Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 57 p.

ORTEGA GUZMÁN, LORETO, 2004. Madurez gonádica de la langosta

espinosa Panulirus inflatus (Decapoda: Palinuridae) en las costas de Nayarit. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 55 p.

PÉREZ LINARES, JESÚS, 2001. Histopatología de postlarvas de camarón

blanco Litopenaeus vannamei (=Penaeus vannamei) expuestas a la cianobacteria Schizothrix calcicola. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, Area Interdisciplinaria de Ciencias del Mar, 57 p.

ROBLES CRUZ, GILBERTO, 2000. Estructura de la población de juveniles y su

incidencia en la pesquería de las langostas Panulirus inflatus (Bouvier) y P. gracilis Streets en el Sur de Sinaloa. Tesis Profesional. Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, 62 p.

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS

AQUATIC ECOLOGY: Vol. 38, No. 4, 2004. BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE: Vol. 207, No. 2, October 2004.

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BOLETÍN ODINCARSA, IOC/UNESCO: No. 5, diciembre de 2004. BOLETÍN DEL PORTAL OCEANICO, UNESCO: No. 6, diciembre de 2004. BOTÁNICA MARINA: Vol. 47, No. 5, 2004. Vol. 47, No. 6, 2004. BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 73, No. 6, December 2004. BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 75, No. 3, November 2004. CIENCIAS MARINAS: Vol. 30, No. 4, diciembre de 2004. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY: Vol. 18, No. 6, December 2004. COPEIA: No. 4, 2004. CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN: No. 11, November 2004. CRUSTACEANA: Vol. 77, Part. 7, July 2004. Vo. 77, Part. 8, August 2004. ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 133, No. 3, February 2005. Vol. 134, No. 1, March 2005. Vol. 134, No. 2, March 2005. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 23, No. 12, December 2004. Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005. EXPLORATIONS: Vol. 11, No. 1, Summer 2004. FAO AQUACULTURE NEWSLETTER: No. 31, July 2004.

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FAO FISHERIES CIRCULAR: No. 1001, 2004: Global Aquaculture Outlook in the Next Decades: An Analysis of

National Aquaculture Production Forecasts to 2030. FAO FISHERIES REPORT: No. 738, 2004: Report of the Expert Consultation on Interactions Between

Sea Turtles and Fisheries Within an Ecosystem Context. Rome, Italy, 9-12 March 2004.

No. 742, 2004: Report of the Third Intergovernmental Consultation on the Establishment of a Southwest Indian Ocean Fisheries Commission. Nairobi, Kenya, 27-30 January 2004.

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 442, 2004: Application of risk assessment in the fish industry. No. 444, 2004: Assessment and Management of Seafood Safety and

Quality. No. 452, 2004. Cambio Climático y Pesquerías regionales en el futuro:

Análisis en Colaboración. No. 465, 2004: The Conservation and Management of Shared Fish Stocks:

Legal and Economic Aspects. FARO, EL: No. 45, diciembre de 2004. FISHERIES: Vol. 29, No. 11, November 2004. Vol. 29, No. 12, December 2004. GACETA BIOMÉDICAS: No. 12, diciembre de 2004. GACETA U.N.A.M.: No. 3771, 13 de diciembre de 2004. No. 3773, 6 de enero de 2005. No. 3774, 10 de enero de 2005. No. 3775, 13 de enero de 2005. No. 3776, 17 de enero de 2005. No. 3777, 20 de enero de 2005. No. 3778, 24 de enero de 2005. No. 3779, 27 de enero de 2005. GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL: Vol. 21, No. 8, December 2004. HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS: No. 26, October 2004.

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HUMANIDADES: No. 282, 1 diciembre de 2004. ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 61, No. 8, December 2004. INDUSTRIA ACUÍCOLA: Vol. 1, No. 2, Diciembre de 2004. INGENIERÍA HIDRÁULICA EN MÉXICO: Vol. XVIII, No. 4, octubre-diciembre de 2003. ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE: Vol. XVI, No. 3, 2004. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:

Vol. 31, No. 12, December 2004. JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:

Special Issue No. 4, Fall 2004: NERRS research and Monitoring. A Nationally Integrated Program. Vol. 20, No. 3, Summer 2004. Vol. 20, No. 4, Fall 2004.

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY: Vol. 24, No. 4, November 2004. JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY: Vol. 92, No. 6, December 2004. JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY: Vol. 40, No. 3, June 2004. JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 34, No. 10, October 2004.

Vol. 34, No. 11, November 2004. JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH: Vol. 26, No. 12, December 2004. LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 49, No. 6, November 2004. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 281, 2004. Vol. 282, 2004.

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Vol. 283, 2004. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION: Vol. 21, No. 11, November 2004.

Vol. 21, No. 12, December 2004. NEW SCIENTIST: Vol. 184, No. 2472, November 6-12, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2473, November 13-19, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2474, November 20-26, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2475, November 27-December 3, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2476, December 4-10, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2477, December 11-17, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2478, December 18-24, 2004. Vol. 184, No. 2479/2480, December 5, 2004-January 7, 2005. PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON: Vol. 117, No. 3, 7 December 2004. Vol. 117, No. 4, 20 December 2004. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY: Vol. 133, No. 6, November 2004. U2000. CRÓNICA DE LA EDUCACIÓN SUPERIOR: No. 445, 10 de enero de 2005. WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT: Vol. 12, No. 4, August 2004. Vol. 12, No. 5, October 2004. Vol. 12, No. 6, December 2004.

REIMPRESOS

CARBALLO, JOSÉ LUIS, BENJAMÍN YÁNEZ AND HÉCTOR NAVA, 2004.

Persistence of the sponge Suberites aurantiaca (Duchassaing and Michelotti, 1864) in an estuarine ecosystem (Pacific Coast, México). Bulletin of Marine Science, 75(3): 487-497.

GLUYAS-MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA y JESÚS TALAVERA-MAYA, 2003.

Composición por tallas y edades de las poblaciones de abulón Haliotis fulgens y H. corrugata de la zona de Bahía Tortugas, Baja California Sur, México. Ciencias Marinas, 29(1): 89-101.

GLUYAS-MILLÁN, MARÍA GEORGINA, CASIMIRO QUIÑÓNEZ VELÁZQUEZ AND JESÚS TALAVERA MAYA, 2002. Effect of El Niño 1997-98 on the snail Astraea

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undosa (Wood) population along the Baja California Western Coast. Journal of Shellfish Research, 21(2): 831-834.

GÓMEZ, SAMUEL, 2004. A new species of Enhydrosoma Boeck, 1872 (Copepoda:

Harpacticoida: Cletodidae) from the Eastern Tropical Pacific. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 117(4): 529-540.

GÓMEZ, SAMUEL AND PEDRO MARTÍNEZ ARBIZU, 2004. First record of the genus

Cyclopina (Copepoda: Cyclopoida), and fully illustrated redescription of Cyclopina caissara from northwestern México. Anales del Instituto de Biología, U.N.A.M., Serie Zoología, 75(1): 121-134.

RAMÍREZ FÉLIX, EVLIN AND HÉCTOR G. MANZO-MONROY, 2004. Comparación

entre el uso de dos derechos de acceso pesquero, concesiones y permisos, en la pesquería de erizo rojo de mar, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus (Agassiz) en Santo Tomás, Baja California, México. Ciencias Marinas, 30(4): 547-560.

SIERRA-BELTRÁN, A.P., R. CORTÉS-ALTAMIRANO AND M.C. CORTÉS-LARA,

2005. Occurrences of Prorocentrum minimum (Pavillard) in México. Harmful Algae, 4: 507-517.

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PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS

AQUATIC ECOLOGY: Vol. 38, No. 4, 2004. Kirsten Neddermann, Monika Nausch, Effects of organic and inorganic nitrogen compounds on the activity of bacterial alkaline phosphatase, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004... 475 - 484 Shin-ichi Nakano, Yuji Tomaru, Toshiya Katano, Atsushi Kaneda, Wataru Makino, Yuichiro Nishibe, Miho Hirose, Masashi Onji, Shin-Ichi Kitamura, Hidetaka Takeoka, The dynamics of microbial and herbivorous food webs in a coastal sea with special reference to intermittent nutrient supply from bottom intrusion, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ............................ 485 - 493 Janne Soininen, Assessing the current related heterogeneity and diversity patterns of benthic diatom communities in a turbid and a clear water river, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ................................................................................................................................................ 495 - 501 Cláudia Fileto, Marlene S. Arcifa, Aloysio S. Ferrão-Filho, Lúcia Helena S. Silva, Influence of phytoplankton fractions on growth and reproduction of tropical cladocerans, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................ 503 - 514 morphology as a defense mechanism against grazing by selected species of rotifers and cladocerans, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ...................................................... 515 - 524 Joop Ringelberg, Erik van Gool, Michaela Brehm, Density and depth variations of Daphnia multilocus genotypes during a summer period in Lake Maarsseveen, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ........................................................................................................................... 525 - 535 Radka Pichlová, Anke Weber, Brigitte Gosser, Leptodora kindtii survival in the laboratory, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004......................................................................................... 537 - 546 Bernd Spänhoff, Norbert Kaschek, Elisabeth Irmgard Meyer, Laboratory investigation on community composition, emergence patterns and biomass of wood-inhabiting Chironomidae (Diptera) from a sandy lowland stream in Central Europe (Germany), Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ........................................................................................................................... 547 - 560 Marina I. Orlova, Jim R. Muirhead, Pavel I. Antonov, Gregory Kh. Shcherbina, Yaroslav I. Starobogatov, G. I. Biochino, Thomas W. Therriault, Hugh J. MacIsaac, Range expansion of quagga mussels Dreissena rostriformis bugensis in the Volga River and Caspian Sea basin, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004............................................................................ 561 - 573 Marina I. Orlova, Jim R. Muirhead, Pavel I. Antonov, Gregory Kh. Shcherbina, Yaroslav I. Starobogatov, G. I. Biochino, Thomas W. Therriault, Hugh J. MacIsaac, Range expansion of quagga mussels Dreissena rostriformis bugensis in the Volga River and Caspian Sea basin, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004............................................................................ 561 - 573 Jonas Nilsson, Roland Engkvist, Lars-Eric Persson, Long-term decline and recent recovery of Fucus populations along the rocky shores of southeast Sweden, Baltic Sea, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004........................................................................................................ 587 - 598 Michaela A. Guest, Rod M. Connolly, Fine-scale movement and assimilation of carbon in saltmarsh and mangrove habitat by resident animals, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ................................................................................................................................................ 599 - 609 James G. Wilson, Niamh Forrest, Population dynamics, biomass and productivity of Limapontia depressa (Gastropoda, Opisthobranchia) at Bull Island, Dublin, Ireland, Aquatic Ecology, Volume 38, Issue 4, Dec 2004 ..................................................................................................................... 575 - 585 BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE: Vol. 207, No. 2, October 2004. Research Note: Joseph R. Schulz, Alex G. Norton, and William F. Gilly The Projectile Tooth of a Fish-Hunting Cone Snail: Conus catus Injects Venom Into Fish Prey Using a High-Speed Ballistic Mechanism ............................................................................................ 77-79. Kazuhiko Koike, Mitsuru Jimbo, Ryuichi Sakai, Masami Kaeriyama, Koji Muramoto, Takehiko Ogata, Tadashi Maruyama, and Hisao Kamiya Octocoral Chemical Signaling Selects and Controls Dinoflagellate Symbionts .................................. 80-86. Symbiosis and Parasitology:

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Louise A. Lewis and Gisèle Muller-Parker Phylogenetic Placement of "Zoochlorellae" (Chlorophyta), Algal Symbiont of the Temperate Sea Anemone Anthopleura elegantissima .................................................................................................. 87-92. Development and Reproduction: Kathryn MCDonald Patterns in Early Embryonic Motility: Effects of Size and Environmental Temperature on Vertical Velocities of Sinking and Swimming Echinoid Blastulae ................................................................... 93-102. Ecology and Evolution: Scott Santagata A Waterborne Behavioral Cue for the Actinotroch Larva of Phoronis pallida (Phoronida) Produced by Upogebia pugettensis (Decapoda: Thalassinidea) ..................................................................... 103-115. Lisbeth Francis Microscaling: Why Larger Anemones Have Longer Cnidae ............................................................ 116-129. Andrew Kramer and Lisbeth Francis Predation Resistance and Nematocyst Scaling for Metridium senile and M. farcimen ................... 130-140. Neurobiology and Behavior: Peter A. V. Anderson, Louise F. Thompson, and Craig G. Moneypenny Evidence for a Common Pattern of Peptidergic Innervation of Cnidocytes ..................................... 141-146. Abstracts from the 2004 Scientific Meetings of the Marine Biological Laboratory: Abstracts: Abstracts from the 2004 General Scientific Meetings of the Marine Biological Laboratory ............. 149-150. The Editor: The MBL Awards for 2004 ...................................................................................................................... 151. Behavior and Neurobiology: E. Brown, J. Hitt, F. Dodge, and R. Barlow Circadian Rhythms in Limulus Visual Sensitivity Compensate for Day-Night Changes in Light Intensity ................................................................................................................................................... 152. Mira Guo, Frederick Dodge, and Robert Barlow Circadian Rhythms in the Locomotor Activity of Juvenile Horseshoe Crabs .......................................... 152. T. Saito, K. Mori, and R. Barlow Circadian Clock: Where Is It Located in the Limulus Brain? ................................................................... 153. Chuan-Chin Chiao, Emma J. Kelman, and Roger T. Hanlon Disruptive Body Patterning of Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) Requires Visual Information on Edges and Brightness of Objects on Natural Substrate Backgrounds .............................................................. 153. Alexandra Barbosa, Christopher F. Florio, Chuan-Chin Chiao, and Roger T. Hanlon Visual Background Features That Elicit Mottled Body Patterns in Cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis .............. 154. Leib Litman and Roger T. Hanlon The Time Course of the Camouflage Response of Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) .................................... 154. Patrick Flight, Gabriele Gerlach, and Jelle Atema Sperm Load Impact on Female Courtship Behavior in the American Lobster (Homarus americanus) ............................................................................................................................................ 155. Robert C. Froemke and Dan Yang Transient NMDA Receptor Suppression Induces Long-Lasting Synaptic Depression ........................... 155. Eric B. Gonzales and Glenn Dillon The Second Transmembrane Domain 7' Position Influences Channel Kinetics in the Glycine 1 Receptor .................................................................................................................................................. 156. A. Giuditta, M. Eyman, C. Cefaliello, E. Ferrara, B.B. Kaplan, Z. Scotto Lavina, and R. De Stefano Local Synthesis of Presynaptic RNA in Squid Optic Lobe Slices ........................................................... 156. Haohua Qian, Richard L. Chappell, Stephen Redenti, and Harris Ripps Membrane Properties of Two Subtypes of Skate Bipolar Cells .............................................................. 157. Stephen Redenti and Richard L. Chappell Zinc Transport in Vertebrate Retina ........................................................................................................ 158. Richard L. Chappell, Haohua Qian, Jane Zakevicius, and Harris Ripps Histidine Suppresses Zinc Modulation of Connexin Hemichannels Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes .... 158. Andrew B. Scioletti, Alan M. Kuzirian, Herman T. Epstein, Thomas J. Nelson, and Daniel L. Alkon Memory Enhancement by Bryostatin in Hermissenda ............................................................................ 159.

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Cellular Biology: Lionel F. Jaffe Marine Plants May Polarize Remote Fucus Eggs via Luminescence .................................................... 160. John H. Henson, Jessica E. Davis, Charles B. Shuster, Christopher A. Fried, and Calvin R. Simerly Characterization of Anastral, Bipolar Spindle Development and Atypical Cytokinesis in Ammonia-Activated Sea Urchin Eggs ..................................................................................................................... 160. Christopher A. Fried, Michelle Reina, and John H. Henson Actin-Mediated Retrograde Flow in Sea Urchin Coelomocytes: Conversion From a Lamellipodial-Dominated to a Filopodial-Dominated Form ........................................................................................... 161. Yuki Kagawa, Timothy L. Megraw, and Rudolf Oldenbourg Cell Division Dynamics of Drosophila Kc Cells Without Functional Mitotic Centrosomes ...................... 161. Clarissa A. Sabella, Ellen E. Faszewski, Jane C. Kaltenbach, William J. Kuhns, Max M. Burger, and Xavier Fernandez-Busquets Immunocytochemical Detection of Integrins 3 and ß1 in Allografts of the Marine Sponge, Microciona prolifera ................................................................................................................................. 162. James Jiayuan Tong Mitochondrial Dynamics in Synaptic Plasticity in Drosophila melanogaster ........................................... 162. Sung Min You, Clarissa Cheney, Agnieszka Swiatecka-Urban, and George M. Langford Role of Rab GTPases in Recruitment of Myosin- V to Vesicles of Squid Giant Axon ............................ 163. John Paul Flores, Y. L. Lee, and George M. Langford Isolation of the Myosin-V/Kinesin Heteromotor Complex by Sucrose Gradient Fractionation ............... 163. Carl J. DeSelm, R. Lu, C. M. Cheney, and George M. Langford Identification of Novel Myosin-V Binding Partners by Immunoprecipitation and Column Chromatography ..................................................................................................................................... 164. Michael P. Conley, Marcus K. Jang, Joseph A. DeGiorgis, and Elaine L. Bearer Anterograde Transport of Peptide-Conjugated Fluorescent Beads in the Squid Giant Axon Identifies a Zip-Code for the Synapse .................................................................................................... 164. Developmental Biology: Omicron L. Ma, Sarah E. Webb, and Andrew L. Miller Imaging Patterns of Ca2+ Transients During the Blastula Period in Zebrafish Embryos ....................... 165. Andrew L. Miller, Catherine Leclerc, Marc Moreau, and Sarah E. Webb Role of Ca2+ Signaling During Early Pronephric Development in Zebrafish and Xenopus Embryos .... 165. Karen Crawford MAP Kinase Expression Correlates With the Posterior Midline in Early Cleavage Stage Squid Embryos .................................................................................................................................................. 166. Mark H. Shalinsky and James Leiter Gill and Lung Rhythm in the Late-Stage Tadpole Rana catesbeiana .................................................... 166. Protein Chemistry, Molecular Biology, and Evolution: Adam Bissonnette and Steven Roberts Characterization of the Myostatin-Like Gene in Argopecten irradians ................................................... 167. Rebecca Vitale and Joseph D. Buxbaum Use of the Split-Ubiquitin Two-Hybrid System to Identify Proteins Interacting With the Alzheimer Proteins APP and LRP ............................................................................................................................ 167. Robert M. Gould, Hilary Morrison, Robert Campbell, and Edwin Gilland Evolution of Myelin Proteins .................................................................................................................... 168. Kristen M. Ettensohn, Peggy Biga, Christina Romano, Robert H. Devlin, and Steven B. Roberts Genes Differentially Expressed in Growth Hormone Transgenic Salmon .............................................. 168. Daniel E. Golden and Stephen L. Hajduk Cis Editing in Trypanosoma brucei brucei as a Model for Understanding Guide-RNA Structural and Functional Requirements ................................................................................................................. 169. Gillian E. Robbins, Gonzalo Giribet, Karin Kiontke, David H. Fitch, Jeffrey L. Boore, and Robert K. Campbell Initial Sequence and Protein Modeling Results of a Mitochondrial Genome Project on Understudied Invertebrate Phyla ............................................................................................................ 169. Bioinformatics:

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David P. Remsen and D. J. Patterson Development of a Global Collaborative Taxonomic Name Service for the Location and Retrieval of Electronic Resources in Biology ............................................................................................................. 170. Microbiology, Pathology, and Immunology: Phoenix Becker, Roxanna Smolowitz, Morgan Porter, Andrea Hsu, and Steven Roberts Characterization of Bacteria Associated With Lobster Shell Disease .................................................... 171. Shira Horenstein, Roxanna Smolowitz, Kevin Uhlinger, and Steven Roberts Diagnosis of Edwardsiella tarda Infection in Oyster Toadfish (Opsanus tau) Held at the Marine Resources Center ................................................................................................................................... 171. Peter B. Armstrong, Margaret T. Armstrong, Steven M. Theg, Nikolai Braun, Norman Wainwright, and R. L. Pardy Histochemical Evidence for Lipopolysaccharide (Endotoxin) in Eukaryotes .......................................... 172. Peter A. Bosniak and Peter B. Armstrong Blood Clotting in Limulus Immunity: Physiological Impairment of Clot-Entrapped Bacteria ................... 172. Ecology and Population Biology: Evan J. Fedorko, R. Gil Pontius, Jr., Stephen P. Aldrich, Luc Claessens, Charles Hopkinson, Jr., and Wilfred M. Wollheim Spatial Distribution of Land Type in Regression Models of Pollutant Loading ....................................... 173. Kayla Halloran, Matt Charette, Paul Henderson, Kevin Kroeger, Lindsey Ryckman, John Crusius, and Dirk Koopmans Estimating Groundwater-Derived Nitrogen Flux Into a Coastal Embayment: Salt Pond, Cape Cod, Massachusetts ........................................................................................................................................ 173. Jenn Kerry, Dorothy Boorse, and Robert Buchsbaum Effect of Nutrient Enrichment and Salinity on Salt Marsh Invertebrates in the Plum Island Estuary ...... 174. Allison C. Craney, S. T. Haley, and S. T. Dyhrman Alkaline Phosphatase Activity in the Toxic Dinoflagellate Karenia brevis .............................................. 174. Leanna R. Heffner, Mirta Teichberg, Sophia Fox, and Ivan Valiela Nitrate Reductase and Glutamine Synthetase Activity and Growth in Ulva lactuca in Waquoit Bay: A Time Sequence of Responses to Differences in Nitrogen Supply ...................................................... 175. Sarah B. Cierpich, Sara P. Grady, and Ivan Valiela Life History Analysis of the Juvenile Horseshoe Crab in Pleasant Bay, Cape Cod ............................... 175. BOTÁNICA MARINA: Vol. 47, No. 5, 2004. Annual versus perennial growth cycle Ruppia maritima L.: temporal variation in population characteristics in Mediterranean lagoon (monolimni and Drana Lagoons, Northern Aegean Sea) Paraskevi Malea, Theodoros Kevrekidis and Athanassios Mogias ........................................................ 357 Giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera) survival in deep water (25-40 m) during El Niño of 1997-1998 in Baja California, Mexico Lydia B. Ladah and Jose A. zercuche-Gonzalez ................................................................................... 367 Effects of temperature and salinity on growth, reproduction and survival in the introduced red alga Heterosiphonia japonica (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) Marit Ruge Bjaerke and jan Rueness ..................................................................................................... 373 Morphology and vegetative reproduction of the introduced species Hypnea cornuted (Rhodophyta, Gigartinales) Ester Cecere, Antonella Petrocelli and Marc Verlaque ......................................................................... 381 Recent introduction of Polydiphonia morrowii (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) to Punta Arenas, Chile Myung-Sook Kim, Eun Chang Yang, Andres Mansilla and Sung Min Boo .............................................. 389 Effect of solar irradiance on lipids of the green alga Ulva fenestrate Postels et Ruprecht Svetlana V. Khotimchenko and Irina M. Yakovlena ................................................................................ 395 Phenolic contents of two brown algae, Turbinaria ornata and Sargassum mangarevense on Tahiti (French Polynesia): interspecific, ontogenic and spatio-temporal variations Stiger, V., E. Deslandes and C.E. Payri .................................................................................................. 402 Interspecific and temporal variation in phlorotannin levels in an assemblage of brown algae Connan, S., F. Goulard, V. Stiger, E. Deslandes and E. Ar Gall ............................................................ 410 New records of planktonic dinoflagellates (Dinophyceae) from the Mexican Pacific Ocean

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Hernández-Becerril, D.U. and E. Bravo-Sierra .................................................................................... 417 Sargassum kendrickii (Fucales, Phaeophyceae), a new species of subgenus Phyllotrichia from southern Australia Goldberg, N.A., and J.M. Huisman ........................................................................................................ 424 Aglaothamnion rigidulum nov. spec. (Rhodophyta, Ceramiaceae) from South Africa* De Clerck, O., J.J. Bolton, R.J. Anderson and E. Coppejans ................................................................. 431 Meeting 437 BOTÁNICA MARINA: Vol. 47, No. 6, 2004. Macroalgal assemblage structure on a coral reef in Nanwan Bay in southern Taiwan Tsai, C.-C., S.-L. Wong, J.-S. Chang, R.-L. Hwang, C.-F. Dai, Y.-C. Yu, Y.-T. Shyu, F. Sheu and T.-M. Lee ............................................................................................................................... 439 The effect of thallus size, life stage, aggregation, wave exposure and substratum conditions on theforces required to break or dislodge the small kelp Ecklonia radiata Thomsen, M.S., T. Wernberg and G.A. Kendrick ................................................................................. 454 Reproduction in the green macroalga Codium (Chlorophyta): characterization of gametes Prince, J.S. and C.D. Trowbridge ........................................................................................................... 461 Vegetative and reproductive morphology of Sargassum orotavicum sp. nov. (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) from the Canary Islands (eastern Atlantic Ocean)* Díaz-Villa, T., J. Afonso-Carrillo and M. Sansón .................................................................................... 471 Recognition of Spyridia griffithsiana comb. nov. (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta): a taxon previously misidentified as Spyridia filamentosa from Europe* Zuccarello, G.C., W.F. Prud’homme van Reine and H. Stegenga ......................................................... 481 Crystalline forms and cross-sectional dimensions of cellulose microfibrils in the Florideophyceae (Rhodophyta) Newman, R.H. and T.C. Davidson ......................................................................................................... 490 Geographic and host distribution of lignicolous mangrove microfungi Schmit, J.P. and C.A. Shearer ................................................................................................................. 496 Acknowledgement ................................................................................................................................... 504 BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 73, No. 6, December 2004. Y. Takazawa, K. Kitamura, M. Yoshikane, Y. Shibata, M. Morita, Discovery of Fenthion Poisoning in Two Japanese Cranes ( Grus japonensis) Found Dead in Hokkaido, Japan, ........................... 947 - 954 R. E. Jung, W. H. Karasov, M. J. Melancon, Cytochrome P450 Activity in Green Frogs ( Rana clamitans melanota) Exposed to Water and Sediments in the Fox River and Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA, ............................................................................................................................ 955 - 962 S. B. Abdel-Ghani, E. Martinez-Lopez, Y. Pérez-Pertejo, A. E. Bayoumi, A. Garcia-Fernandez, R. Balaña-Fouce, D. Ordóñez, Cytotoxicity and Mutagenicity of Four Insect Pheromones in CHO-K1 Cells, .............................................................................................................................................. 963 - 970 M. B. M. Ibrahim, H. A. Gamila, Algal Bioassay for Evaluating the Role of Algae in Bioremediation of Crude Oil: II. Freshwater Phytoplankton Assemblages, ............................................................ 971 - 978 J. R. Xia, Y. J. Li, J. Lu, B. Chen, Effects of Copper and Cadmium on Growth, Photosynthesis, and Pigment Content in Gracilaria lemaneiformis, ........................................................................ 979 - 986 K. Stook, B. Dubey, M. Ward, T. Townsend, G. Bitton, H. Solo-Gabriele, Heavy Metal Toxicity of Pressure Treated Wood Leachates with MetPLATE <sup>TM</sup>, ......................................... 987 - 994 Y. Kamaya, T. Takada, K. Suzuki, Effect of Medium Phosphate Levels on the Sensitivity of Selenastrum capricornutum to Chemicals, , ............................................................................................ 995 S. A. Jusu, F. X. Kong, B. Q. Qing, J. K. Tan, X. B. Han, Time Course Biochemical Responses of Green Algae Scenedesmus obliquus to Aluminum and Low pH, .............................................. 1001 - 1008 T. V. Beaty, A. C. Hendricks, Effects of Culture Methods on Survival, Weight, and Development of Chironomus riparius Meigen, ..................................................................................................... 1009 - 1016 S. X. Liu, C. L. Sun, S. R. Zhang, Photocatalytic Regeneration of Exhausted Activated Carbon Saturated with Phenol, ............................................................................................................... 1017 - 1024

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M. T. Begonia, G. B. Begonia, G. Miller, D. Gilliard, C. Young, Phosphatase Activity and Populations of Microorganisms from Cadmium- and Lead-Contaminated Soils, ...................... 1025 - 1032 M. T. Begonia, G. B. Begonia, G. S. Miller, D. Gilliard, Effects of Chelate Application Time on the Phytoextraction of Lead-Contaminated Soils, ............................................................................ 1033 - 1040 I. R. Phillips, D. T. Lamb, D. W. Hawker, E. D. Burton, Effects of pH and Salinity on Copper, Lead, and Zinc Sorption Rates in Sediments from Moreton Bay, Australia, ........................................ 1041 - 1048 C. Espinoza, A. Camaño, R. Díaz, Spatial and Temporal Comparison of Copper Bioaccumulation in the Mussel Aulacomya ater (Molina) from Jorgillo Location (23°45’S; 79°27’W) and Dichato Location (36°32’S; 71°56’W), Chile, .......................................................................................... 1049 - 1056 R. B. Voegborlo, D. A. Baah, E. E. Kwaansa-Ansah, A. A. Adimado, J. H. Ephraim, Mercury Concentrations in Fish Species from the Gulf of Guinea, Ghana, ............................................. 1057 - 1064 K. Liber, S. Stoughton, A. Rosaasen, Chronic Uranium Toxicity to White Sucker Fry ( Catostomus commersoni), ............................................................................................................................. 1065 - 1071 A. D. Pereira Netto, I. F. Cunha, T. M. Krauss, Persistence of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the Soil of a Burned Area for Agricultural Purposes in Brazil, ................................................... 1072 - 1077 J. K. Muller, K. G. Johnson, M. S. Sepúlveda, C. J. Borgert, T. S. Gross, Accumulation of Dietary DDE and Dieldrin by Largemouth Bass, Micropterus salmoides floridanus, ............................. 1078 - 1085 G. F. Antonious, Persistence of 2-Tridecanone on the Leaves of Seven Vegetables, .............. 1086 - 1093 S. Suhaimi, N. M. Tahir, S. Suriyati, Dissolved Nutrients and Chlorophyll a Status of the Setiu River, Terengganu, Malaysia, .................................................................................................... 1094 - 1100 Y. Takazawa, K. Kitamura, M. Yoshikane, Y. Shibata, M. Morita, F. Sugimori, Comparison of Organochlorine Compounds Among Fat, Muscles, and Livers of Pintails ( Anas acuta) from Lake Hyoko, Japan, ............................................................................................................................ 1101 - 1108 X. Jin, G. Huang, G. Jiang, Q. Zhou, J. Liu, Distribution of 4-Nonylphenol Isomers in Surface Water of the Haihe River, People’s Republic of China, ............................................................ 1109 – 1116 BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 75, No. 3, November 2004. Age, Growth, and Reproduction of the Red Snapper, Lutjanus campechanus, from the Atlantic Waters of the Southeastern U. S. ...............................................................................................335-360(26) Authors: D. Byron White; Sandra M. Palmer Feeding Ecology of Lanternfish (Pisces: Myctophidae) Larvae: Prey Preferences as a Reflection of Morphology ..............................................................................................................................361-379(19) Authors: Walter J. Conley; Thomas L. Hopkins Systematics of Pelagic Aeolid Nudibranchs Of The Family Glaucidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda). 381-389(9) Authors: Ágel Valdés; Orso Angulo Campillo Dynamics of Dissolved Organic Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus in a Seagrass Meadow of Laguna Madre, Texas ..................................................................................................................391-407(17) Authors: Susan Ziegler; Edith Kaiser; Ronald Benner A New Species of Cyamid (Crustacea: Amphipoda) From A Stranded Cetacean in Southern Bahia, Brazil ................................................................................................................................ 409-421(13) Authors: T.A. Haney; A.O. De Almeida; M.S.S. Reis Timing of Skeletal Band Formation In Montastraea Annularis: Relationship to Environmental and Endogenous Factors................................................................................................................... 423-437(15) Author: Judith Mendes Nocturnal Vertical Distribution of Late-stage Larval Coral Reef Fishes Off the Leeward Side of Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia ................................................................................ 439-451(13) Author: Rebecca Fisher Coral Community Structure and Dynamics in the Huatulco Area, Western Mexico...................453-472(20) Authors: Ramón Andrés López Pérez; Luz María Hernández Ballesteros Spatial, Ontogenetic, and Temporal Variation in the Feeding Habits of the Squirrelfish Sargocentron Microstoma on Reefs in Moorea, French Polynesia ...............................................473-480(8) Authors: Jesús Ernesto Arias-González; René Galzin; Mireille Harmelin-Vivien New Records of Elasmobranchs from the Cayman Trench, Jamaica..........................................481-485(5) Authors: Donna M. Mclaughlin; John F. Morrissey

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Persistence of the Sponge Suberites Aurantiaca (duchassaing and Michelotti, 1864) in an Estuarine Ecosystem (pacific Coast, Mexico)..............................................................................487-497(11) Authors: José Luis Carballo; Benjamín Yáñez; Héctor Nava Changing Sea Levels: Effects of Tides, Weather and Climate.....................................................499-500(2) Author: Amy Clement CIENCIAS MARINAS: Vol. 30, No. 4, diciembre de 2004. Transport of benthic diatoms across the continental shelf off southern Baja California Peninsula. Transporte de diatomeas bentónicas sobre la plataforma continental en frente de la parte sur de la Península de Baja California. A. Martínez-López, D.A. Siqueiros-Beltrones y N. Silverbergs ......................................................... 503-513 Respuesta de los poliquetos bentónicos a la variabilidad ambiental y condiciones El Niño en Bahía Petacalco (Guerrero, México). Response of benthic polychaetes to environmental variability and El Niño conditions at Petacalco Bay (Guerrero, Mexico). J.A. Rodríguez-Valencia .................................................................................................................... 515-526 Niveles plasmáticos de hormona luteinizante en machos de lubina (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) alimentados con dietas con distinta composición en ácidos grasos. Luteinizing hormone plasma levels in male European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) feeding diets with different fatty acid composition. José María Navas, Evaristo Mañanós, Jesús Ramos, Silvia Zanuy y Manuel Carrillo ................... 527–536 Susceptibilidad de Litopenaeus schmitti y Cherax quadricarinatus al virus del síndrome de la mancha blanca (WSSV). Susceptibility of Litopenaeus schmitti and Cherax quadricarinatus to white spot syndrome virus (WSSV). M.L. Unzueta-Bustamante, R. Silveira-Cofficny, A.A. Prieto, G. Aguirre-Guzmán y R. Vázquez-Juárez. ............................................................................................................................................. 537–545 Comparación entre el uso de dos derechos de acceso pesquero, concesiones y permisos, en la pesquería de erizo rojo de mar, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus (Agassiz), en Santo Tomás, Baja California, México. Modelling the use of two fishery access rights, concessions and licences, in the red sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus (Agassiz), fishery at Santo Tomás, Baja California, Mexico. Evlin Ramírez-Félix y Héctor G. Manzo-Monroy ............................................................................. 547–560 Assessment of the Pacific red snapper (Lutjanus peru) fishery in the southwestern Gulf of California. Evaluación de la pesquería del huachinango (Lutjanus peru) en el suroeste del Golfo de California. J. Gabriel Díaz-Uribe, Ernesto A. Chávez y Juan F. Elorduy-Garay................................................ 561–574 Morfodinámica de una playa mesomareal expuesta con terraza de bajamar (Faro, Sur de Portugal). Morphodynamics of a mesotidal, exposed, low tide terrace beach (Faro, southern Portugal). G. Anfuso y N. Ruiz ......................................................................................................................... 575–584 Fases geoquímicas del Fe y grado de piritización en sedimentos de la Ría de Pontevedra (NO de España): Implicaciones del cultivo del mejillón en bateas. Geochemical phases of Fe and degree of pyritization in sediments from Ría de Pontevedra (NW Spain): Implications of mussel raft culture. I. León, G. Méndez y B. Rubio.......................................................................................................... 585–602 Calibración de los paleotermómetros de Sr/Ca y Mg/Ca en el coral Porites sp. de Isla San Benedicto, Archipiélago Revillagigedo, México. Calibration of Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca paleothermometers in coral Porites sp. from San Benedicto Island, Revillagigedo Archipelago, Mexico. J.A. Villaescusa y J.D. Carriquiry...................................................................................................... 603–618

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Hábitos de alimentación del lenguado Paralichtys orbignyanus (Valenciennes, 1842) en una laguna costera somera del Atlántico Sur: Rocha, Uruguay. Feeding habits of the flounder Paralichthys orbignyanus (Valenciennes, 1842) in a shallow coastal lagoon of the southern Atlantic Ocean: Rocha, Uruguay. Walter Norbis y Oscar Galli............................................................................................................... 619–625 Microflora de la sardina (Sardina pilchardus) fresca y refrigerada de la costa Atlántica marroquí. Microflora of fresh and ice-stored sardines (Sardina pilchardus) from the Moroccan Atlantic coast. Fatima Elotmani, Omar Assobhei, Anne-Marie Revol-Junelles y Jean-Bernard Millière ................. 619–625 CONSERVATION BIOLOGY: Vol. 18, No. 6, December 2004. Conservation Biology in the Pacific ........................................................................................................ 1449 Letters ICO Approaches to Tropical Forest Conservation...................................................................... 1452 Steven V. Price, Steffen Reichle Letters: 2 ................................................................................................................................................. 1452 Richard E. Rice, Eduard T. Niesten Letters: 3 ................................................................................................................................................. 1454 Claudia Romero, Germán I. Andrade Editor's Acknowledgments...................................................................................................................... 1456 Orr's Laws ............................................................................................................................................... 1457 David W. Orr Deflating the Ecological Bubble .............................................................................................................. 1461 Denis Hayes Abandon Environmentalism for the Sake of the Revolution ................................................................... 1463 Bill Vitek Dreaming the Impossible ........................................................................................................................ 1465 Thomas E. Lovejoy Understanding the Causes of Disease in European Freshwater Crayfish ............................................. 1466 BRETT F. EDGERTON, PAULA HENTTONEN, JAPO JUSSILA, ARI MANNONEN, PIETARI PAASONEN, TROND TAUGBØL, LENNART EDSMAN, CATHERINE SOUTY-GROSSET Ecosystem Management across Ownerships: the Potential for Collision with Antitrust Laws ............... 1475 JONATHAN R. THOMPSON, MARK D. ANDERSON, K. NORMAN JOHNSON When Good Animals Love Bad Habitats: Ecological Traps and the Conservation of Animal Populations ............................................................................................................................................. 1482 JAMES BATTIN Volunteers in Marine Conservation Monitoring: a Study of the Distribution of Seahorses Carried Out in Collaboration with Recreational Scuba Divers ............................................................................. 1492 STEFANO GOFFREDO, CORRADO PICCINETTI, FRANCESCO ZACCANTI Potential Ecological Distribution of Alien Invasive Species and Risk Assessment: a Case Study of Buffel Grass in Arid Regions of Mexico .................................................................................................. 1504 LAURA ARRIAGA, ALEJANDRO E. CASTELLANOS V., ELIZABETH MORENO, JESÚS ALARCÓN Implications of Clonal Structure for Effective Population Size and Genetic Drift in a Rare Terrestrial Orchid, Cremastra appendiculata.......................................................................................... 1515 MI YOON CHUNG, JOHN D. NASON, MYONG GI CHUNG Influence of Temporal Scale of Sampling on Detection of Relationships between Invasive Plants and the Diversity Patterns of Plants and Butterflies................................................................................ 1525 RALPH MAC NALLY, ERICA FLEISHMAN, DENNIS D. MURPHY Response of Savanna Fire Regimes to Changing Fire-Management Policies in a Large African National Park........................................................................................................................................... 1533 B.W. VAN WILGEN, N. GOVENDER, H.C. BIGGS, D. NTSALA, X.N. FUNDA Modeling Prescribed Surface-Fire Regimes for Pinus strobus Conservation ........................................ 1541 JENNIFER L. BEVERLY, DAVID L. MARTELL Conservation Threat of Increasing Fire Frequencies in the Western Ghats, India................................. 1553 NARENDRAN KODANDAPANI, MARK A. COCHRANE, R. SUKUMAR

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Changes in Forest Use Value through Ecological Succession and Their Implications for Land Management in the Peruvian Amazon.................................................................................................... 1562 MICHAEL C. GAVIN Ecological Correlates of Extinction Proneness in Tropical Butterflies .................................................... 1571 LIAN PIN KOH, NAVJOT S. SODHI, BARRY W. BROOK Catastrophic Decline in Mollusc Diversity in Eastern Tasmania and Its Concurrence with Shellfish Fisheries.................................................................................................................................................. 1579 G.J. EDGAR, C.R. SAMSON The Role of Hybrid Vigor in the Replacement of Pecos Pupfish by Its Hybrids with Sheepshead Minnow.................................................................................................................................................... 1589 JONATHAN A. ROSENFIELD, STACY NOLASCO, STEVEN LINDAUER, CLAUDETTE SANDOVAL, ASTRID KODRIC-BROWN A Concentric Analysis of the Impact of Urbanization on the Threatened European Tree Frog in an Agricultural Landscape ........................................................................................................................... 1599 JÉRÔME PELLET, ANTOINE GUISAN, NICOLAS PERRIN Bird Species' Tolerance of Secondary Forest Habitats and Its Effects on Extinction ............................ 1607 GRANT M. HARRIS, STUART L. PIMM Linkage of Conservation Activity to Trends in the U.S. Economy .......................................................... 1617 OLIVER R. W. PERGAMS, BRIAN CZECH, J. CHRISTOPHER HANEY, DENNIS NYBERG Correlations among Extinction Risks Assessed by Different Systems of Threatened Species Categorization ......................................................................................................................................... 1624 JULIAN J. O'GRADY, MARK A. BURGMAN, DAVID A. KEITH, LAWRENCE L. MASTER, SANDY J. ANDELMAN, BARRY W. BROOK, GEOFFREY A. HAMMERSON, TRACEY REGAN, RICHARD FRANKHAM From Red Lists to Species of Conservation Concern............................................................................. 1636 VERENA KELLER, KURT BOLLMANN Damage to Cauliflower Coral by Monofilament Fishing Lines in Hawaii ................................................ 1645 KAZUE ASOH, TOMOKO YOSHIKAWA, RANDALL KOSAKI, ELIZABETH A. MARSCHALL Effects of Road Fencing on Population Persistence .............................................................................. 1651 JOCHEN A. G. JAEGER, LENORE FAHRIG Edge Effects and Isolation: Red-Backed Voles Revisited ...................................................................... 1658 DAVID A. TALLMON, L. SCOTT MILLS Relative Contributions of Sampling Error in Initial Population Size and Vital Rates to Outcomes of Population Viability Analysis ................................................................................................................... 1665 PHILIP D. McLOUGHLIN, FRANÇOIS MESSIER The Sum Is Greater than the Parts ......................................................................................................... 1670 JENNIFER MOLNAR, MICHELLE MARVIER, PETER KAREIVA Beyond Noah: Saving Species Is Not Enough ....................................................................................... 1672 JONATHAN V. HIGGINS, TAYLOR H. RICKETTS, JEFFREY D. PARRISH, ERIC DINERSTEIN, GEORGE POWELL, SUZANNE PALMINTERI, JONATHAN M. HOEKSTRA, JOHN MORRISON, ADAM TOMASEK, JONATHAN ADAMS Nature Conservation Requires More than a Passion for Species .......................................................... 1674 RICHARD M. COWLING, ANDREW T. KNIGHT, DANIEL P. FAITH, SIMON FERRIER, AMANDA T. LOMBARD, AMANDA DRIVER, MATHIEU ROUGET, KRISTAL MAZE, PHILIP G. DESMET Conservation Planning and Biodiversity: Assembling the Best Data for the Job ................................... 1677 R. L. PRESSEY Species, Data, and Conservation Planning ............................................................................................ 1682 THOMAS BROOKS, GUSTAVO A. B. da FONSECA, ANA S. L. RODRIGUES Do Alien Plants Reduce Insect Biomass? ............................................................................................. 1689 DOUGLAS W. TALLAMY Deforesting the Earth: from Prehistory to Global Crisis.......................................................................... 1693 Donald J. Leopold The Book of Hope ................................................................................................................................... 1694 Thomas L. Fleischner Owl Update ............................................................................................................................................. 1696 Jeff N. Davis

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An Avian Success Story.......................................................................................................................... 1697 Charles J. Henny Biological Conveyor Belts ....................................................................................................................... 1699 Anthony Ricciardi CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN: No. 11, November 2004. TROPICS 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 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

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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 THESE TWO MAPS ARE NOT IN THE BULLETIN United States Surface Temperature - Anomalies and Percentiles United States Surface Precipitation - Total and Percentiles 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 Northern Hemisphere Snow Cover A2.2

CRUSTACEANA: Vol. 77, Part. 7, July 2004. Retromysis nura new genus and species (Mysidacea, Mysidae, Heteromysini) from a superficial marine cave in Minorca (Balearic Islands, Mediterranean Sea) K. Wittmann .............................................................................................................................................. 769 Larval stages of the blue swimmer crab, Portunus pelagicus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Decapoda, Brachyura) J. Josileen & N. Menon ............................................................................................................................ 785 Effets de la salinité et de la température sur la croissance et la reproduction de Moina salina Daday, 1888 (Branchiopoda, Moinidae) [The effects of salinity and temperature on the growth and reproduction of Moina salina Daday, 1888 (Branchiopoda, Moinidae)] A. Rokneddine ......................................................................................................................................... 805 On a new species of Gammarus (Amphipoda, Gammaridae) from Zuanyankong cave, Guizhou, China Z. Hou, P. Li & S. Li ................................................................................................................................. 825 Fine structure of the haemocytes of the Indian white shrimp, Fenneropenaeus indicus (H. Milne Edwards, 1837) P. Laxmilatha & A. Laxminarayana .......................................................................................................... 835 A new species of Longiflagrum (Tanaidacea, Parapseudidae), from Songkhla Lagoon, Thailand S. Angsupanich ........................................................................................................................................ 849 The taxonomic status of the introduced North American signal crayfish, Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852) in Japan, and the source of specimens in the newly reported population in Fukushima Prefecture T. Kawai, T. Mitamura & A. Ohtaka ......................................................................................................... 861 New records of large branchiopods (Branchiopoda, Anostraca, Notostraca, and Spinicaudata) from Extremadura (southwestern Iberian Peninsula) J. Pérez-Bote ........................................................................................................................................... 871 Notes and News........................................................................................................................................ 879 The barnacle, Xenobalanus globicipitis (Cirripedia, Coronulidae), attached to the bottle-nosed dolphin, Tursiops truncatus (Mammalia, Cetacea) on the southeastern coast of India S. Karuppiah, A. Subramanian & J. Obbard ............................................................................................ 879 Scanning EM diagnosis of marine Decapoda larvae: a comparison of preparation techniques R. Meyer & R. Melzer ............................................................................................................................... 883 New records of Mysidopsis tortonesei Băcescu, 1968 and M. rionegrensis Hoffmeyer, 1993 (Mysidacea) from the Río de la Plata estuary and Buenos Aires coastal waters

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A. Schiariti, H. Mianzan & F. Ramírez ..................................................................................................... 887 CRUSTACEANA: Vo. 77, Part. 8, August 2004. Chemosensory behaviour in the mud crab, Rhithropanopeus harrisii tridentatus from Martwa Wisla Estuary (Gdansk Bay, Baltic Sea) A. Kidawa, M. Markowska & S. Rakusa-Suszczewski ............................................................................ 897 The effect of low flow and stream drying on the distribution and relative abundance of the alien amphipod, Echinogammarus berilloni (Catta, 1878) in a karstic stream system (Westphalia, Germany) A. Meyer, N. Kaschek & E. Meyer ........................................................................................................... 909 Influence de la salinité et de la température sur la reproduction d'Arctodiaptomus salinus (Daday, 1885) (Copepoda, Calanoida), du marais temporaire salé, ``La Sebkha Zima'' (Maroc) [The influence of salinity and temperature on the reproduction of Arctodiaptomus salinus (Daday, 1885) (Copepoda, Calanoida) in the temporary salt marsh, ``La Sebkha Zima'' (Morocco)] A. Rokneddine ......................................................................................................................................... 923 The vertical migration behaviour of two calanoid copepods, Acartia tonsa Dana, 1849 and Paracalanus parvus (Claus, 1863) in a stratified tropical bay in Brazil C. Gomes, A. Marazzo & J. Valentin ....................................................................................................... 941 Copepod assemblages and diel vertical migration in the East China Sea, north of Taiwan W. Lo, C. Shih & J. Hwang ...................................................................................................................... 955 Population growth of Daphnia pulex (Cladocera) on a mixed diet (Microcystis aeruginosa with Chlorella or Scenedesmus) A. Alva-Martınez, S. Sarma & S. Nandini ................................................................................................ 973 Lethal effects of ultraviolet radiation under different concentrations of dissolved organic carbon on Neobosmina chilensis (Daday, 1902) (Cladocera, Bosminidae) P. De los Ríos .......................................................................................................................................... 989 Xantho poressa (Olivi, 1792) and Xantho pilipes A. Milne-Edwards, 1867 larvae (Brachyura, Xanthidae): scanning EM diagnosis of zoea I from the Adriatic Sea R. Meyer, S. Friedrich & R. Melzer .......................................................................................................... 997 Expanding the known distribution of Chirocephalus kerkyrensis Pesta, 1936 (Branchiopoda, Anostraca) in Italy G. Mura & G. Belmonte .......................................................................................................................... 1007 Notes and News...................................................................................................................................... 1013 A new species of corophiid for the Turkish fauna: Chelicorophium maeoticum (Sowinsky, 1898) (Amphipoda) M. Özbek, M. Ustaoglu & S. Balik .......................................................................................................... 1013 A note on the priority of Rumphius' observation of Decapod Crustacea living in Nepenthes E. Beekman ............................................................................................................................................ 1019 [Review of] B. A. Marshall & B. Richer de Forges (eds.), 2004. Tropical deep sea benthos L. Holthuis .............................................................................................................................................. 1023 [Review of] H. Schmalfuss & K. Wolf-Schwenninger, 2002. A bibliography of terrestrial isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda: Oniscidea). H. Schmalfuss, 2003. World catalog of terrestrial isopods (Isopoda: Oniscidea) L. Holthuis .............................................................................................................................................. 1024 ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 133, No. 3, February 2005. Aquatic microcosm assessment of the effects of tylosin on Lemna gibba and Myriophyllum spicatum ........................................................................................................................................... 389-401 Richard A. Brain, Ketut (Jim) Bestari, Hans Sanderson, Mark L. Hanson, Christian J. Wilson, David J. Johnson, Paul K. Sibley and Keith R. Solomon Monitoring and modelling of biosphere/atmosphere exchange of gases and aerosols in Europe ... 403-413 Jan Willem Erisman, Alex Vermeulen, Arjan Hensen, Chris Flechard, Ulrich Dämmgen, David Fowler, Mark Sutton, Ludger Grünhage and Juha-Pekka Tuovinen Concentrations and compositions of organochlorine contaminants in sediments, soils, crustaceans, fishes and birds collected from Lake Tai, Hangzhou Bay and Shanghai city region, China ................................................................................................................................................. 415-429

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Haruhiko Nakata, Yuko Hirakawa, Masahiro Kawazoe, Tetsuji Nakabo, Koji Arizono, Shin-Ichi Abe, Takeshi Kitano, Hideaki Shimada, Izumi Watanabe, Weihua Li and Xucheng Ding Modelling the fate of sulphur-35 in crops. 1. Calibration data ........................................................ 431-437 Chris Collins and Nathan Cunningham Modelling the fate of sulphur-35 in crops. 2. Development and validation of the CROPS-35 model .......................................................................................................................................................... 439-445 Chris Collins and Nathan Cunningham Intrinsic and induced isoproturon catabolic activity in dissimilar soils and soils under dissimilar land use • ................................................................................................................................................ 447-454 Brian J. Reid, Niki D. Papanikolaou and Ronah K. Wilcox The effects of perennial ryegrass and alfalfa on microbial abundance and diversity in petroleum contaminated soil • .......................................................................................................................... 455-465 Jennifer L. Kirk, John N. Klironomos, Hung Lee and Jack T. Trevors Quantifying the role of forest soil and bedrock in the acid neutralization of surface water in steep hillslopes • ....................................................................................................................................... 467-480 Yuko Asano and Taro Uchida Mercury burdens in Chinese mitten crabs (Eriocheir sinensis) in three tributaries of southern San Francisco Bay, California, USA • .................................................................................................... 481-487 Clifford A. Hui, Deborah Rudnick and Erin Williams Accumulation of butyl- and phenyltin compounds in starfish and bivalves from the coastal environment of Korea • ................................................................................................................... 489-499 Won Joon Shim, Un Hyuk Yim, Nam Sook Kim, Sang Hee Hong, Jae Ryoung Oh, Joong Kyun Jeon and Hideo Okamura Brominated flame retardants in Alburnus alburnus from Cinca River Basin (Spain) • .................... 501-508 Ethel Eljarrat, Agustina de la Cal, Demetrio Raldua, Concha Duran and Damia Barcelo Temporal trends of organochlorine contamination in Black Guillemots in Iceland from 1976 to 1996 • .............................................................................................................................................. 509-515 Kristín Ólafsdóttir, Ævar Petersen, Elín V. Magnúsdóttir, Thorvaldur Björnsson and Torkell Jóhannesson presence of humic acids • ............................................................................................................... 517-529 Helena Prosen and Lucija Zupančič-Kralj Differential swimming performance of two natricine snakes exposed to a cholinesterase-inhibiting pesticide • ........................................................................................................................................ 531-540 W.A. Hopkins, C.T. Winne and S.E. DuRant Clonal variation in heavy metal accumulation and biomass production in a poplar coppice culture. II. Vertical distribution and phytoextraction potential • .................................................................... 541-551 I. Laureysens, L. De Temmerman, T. Hastir, M. Van Gysel and R. Ceulemans Physiological and foliar symptom response in the crowns of Prunus serotina, Fraxinus americana and Acer rubrum canopy trees to ambient ozone under forest conditions • ................................... 553-567 M. Schaub, J.M. Skelly, J.W. Zhang, J.A. Ferdinand, J.E. Savage, R.E. Stevenson, D.D. Davis and K.C. Steiner Stochastic analysis to assess the spatial distribution of groundwater nitrate concentrations in the Po catchment (Italy) • ...................................................................................................................... 569-580 Sergio Cinnirella, Gabriele Buttafuoco and Nicola Pirrone Absorption of decabromodiphenyl ether and other organohalogen chemicals by grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) • ..................................................................................................................... 581-586 Gareth O. Thomas, Simon E.W. Moss, Lillemor Asplund and Ailsa J. Hall Spray irrigation of landfill leachate: estimating potential exposures to workers and bystanders using a modified air box model and generalised source term • ...................................................... 587-599 Duncan Gray, Simon J.T. Pollard, Lynn Spence, Richard Smith and Jan R. Gronow ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION Vol. 134, No. 1, March 2005. Quantifying ozone uptake and its effects on the stand level of common beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in Southern ................................................................................................................................................ 1-4 Christoph Dittmar, Klaus Pfaffelmoser, Thomas Rötzer and Wolfram Elling Validated sampling strategy for assessing contaminants in soil stockpiles • ....................................... 5-11 Frank Lamé, Ton Honders, Giljam Derksen and Michiel Gadella

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Mercury transfer from fish carcasses to scavengers in boreal lakes: the use of stable isotopes of mercury • ............................................................................................................................................. 13-22 José Sarica, Marc Amyot, Landis Hare, Paul Blanchfield, R.A. (Drew) Bodaly, Holger Hintelmann and Marc Lucotte Study of calcium-dependent lead-tolerance on plants differing in their level of Ca-deficiency tolerance • ........................................................................................................................................... 23-34 Danuta Maria Antosiewicz Sorption studies of chloroanilines on kaolinite and montmorillonite • ................................................. 35-43 S. Angioi, S. Polati, M. Roz, C. Rinaudo, V. Gianotti and M.C. Gennaro Bioaccumulation of 51Cr, 63Ni and 14C in Baltic Sea benthos • ....................................................... 45-56 L. Kumblad, C. Bradshaw and M. Gilek Do tubificid worms influence the fate of organic matter and pollutants in stormwater sediments? • .. 57-69 F. Mermillod-Blondin, G. Nogaro, T. Datry, F. Malard and J. Gibert Release behavior of triazine residues in stabilised contaminated soils • ........................................... 71-77 G.G. Ying, R.S. Kookana and M. Mallavarpu Mercury contamination in human hair and fish from Cambodia: levels, specific accumulation and risk assessment • ................................................................................................................................ 79-86 Tetsuro Agusa, Takashi Kunito, Hisato Iwata, In Monirith, Touch Seang Tana, Annamalai Subramanian and Shinsuke Tanabe Impact of a flood disaster on sediment toxicity in a major river system – the Elbe flood 2002 as a case study • ......................................................................................................................................... 87-95 Matthias Oetken, Burkhard Stachel, Markus Pfenninger and Jörg Oehlmann Contamination of rivers in Tianjin, China by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons • ............................. 97-111 Z. Shi, S. Tao, B. Pan, W. Fan, X.C. He, Q. Zuo, S.P. Wu, B.G. Li, J. Cao, W.X. Liu et al. Bioaccumulation of PCBs in the cuttlefish Sepia officinalis from seawater, sediment and food pathways • ....................................................................................................................................... 113-122 B. Danis, P. Bustamante, O. Cotret, J.L. Teyssié, S.W. Fowler and M. Warnau The combined effect of lead exposure and high or low dietary calcium on health and immunocompetence in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) • ..................................................... 123-132 Tinne Snoeijs, Tom Dauwe, Rianne Pinxten, Veerle M. Darras, Lutgarde Arckens and Marcel Eens In situ exposures using caged organisms: a multi-compartment approach to detect aquatic toxicity and bioaccumulation • ..................................................................................................................... 133-144 G. Allen Burton, Jr., Marc S. Greenberg, Carolyn D. Rowland, Cameron A. Irvine, Daniel R. Lavoie, John A. Brooker, Laurie Moore, Delia F.N. Raymer and Ruth A. McWilliam Using plant biomonitors and flux modelling to develop O3 dose–response relationships in Catalonia • ....................................................................................................................................... 145-151 The maximum reservoir capacity of soils for persistent organic pollutants: implications for global cycling • ........................................................................................................................................... 153-164 M. Dalla Valle, E. Jurado, J. Dachs, A.J. Sweetman and K.C. Jones Water striders (family Gerridae): mercury sentinels in small freshwater ecosystems • .................. 165-171 Timothy D. Jardine, Tom A. Al, Kerry T.B. MacQuarrie, Charles D. Ritchie, Paul A. Arp, Antu Maprani and Richard A. Cunjak Mercury baseline levels in Flemish soils (Belgium) • ...................................................................... 173-179 Filip M.G. Tack, Thomas Vanhaesebroeck, Marc G. Verloo, Kurt Van Rompaey and Eric Van Ranst ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION Vol. 134, No. 2, March 2005. Assessing soil ecotoxicity of methyl tert-butyl ether using earthworm bioassay; closed soil microcosm test for volatile organic compounds • ........................................................................... 181-186 Youn-Joo An Effect of organic fertilizers derived dissolved organic matter on pesticide sorption and leaching • 187-194 Kun Li, Baoshan Xing and William A. Torello Microfibril angle in wood of Scots pine trees (Pinus sylvestris) after irradiation from the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident • ............................................................................................................... 195-199 Mirela Tulik and Aleksandra Rusin Absence of Hg transpiration by shoot after Hg uptake by roots of six terrestrial plant species • ... 201-208

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Maria Greger, Yaodong Wang and Clara Neuschütz Effects of elevated ozone on leaf δ13C and leaf conductance of plant species grown in semi-natural grassland with or without irrigation • ................................................................................... 209-216 M. Jäggi, M. Saurer, M. Volk and J. Fuhrer Evidence of the involvement of plant ligno-cellulosic structure in the sequestration of Pb: an X-ray spectroscopy-based analysis • ....................................................................................................... 217-227 Marta Marmiroli, Gianni Antonioli, Elena Maestri and Nelson Marmiroli Nitrogen species in drinking water indicate potential exposure pathway for Balkan Endemic Nephropathy • ................................................................................................................................. 229-237 Nedialka Niagolova, Shawn P. McElmurry, Thomas C. Voice, David T. Long, Evangelos A. Petropoulos, Ivan Havezov, Karen Chou and Varban Ganev Cadmium uptake by tobacco as affected by liming, N form, and year of cultivation • .................... 239-246 C.D. Tsadilas, N.A. Karaivazoglou, N.C. Tsotsolis, S. Stamatiadis and V. Samaras Isotopic characterisation of lead in contaminated soils from the vicinity of a non-ferrous metal smelter near Plovdiv, Bulgaria • ...................................................................................................... 247-255 Jeffrey R. Bacon and Nikolai S. Dinev Interactive effect of Brevibacillus brevis and Glomus mosseae, both isolated from Cd contaminated soil, on plant growth, physiological mycorrhizal fungal characteristics and soil enzymatic activities in Cd polluted soil • ......................................................................................... 257-266 A. Vivas, J.M. Barea and R. Azcón Oil spill in the Río de la Plata estuary, Argentina: 2-hydrocarbon disappearance rates in sediments and soils • ........................................................................................................................................ 267-276 J.C. Colombo, A. Barreda, C. Bilos, N. Cappelletti, M.C. Migoya and C. Skorupka Oil spill in the Río de la Plata estuary, Argentina: 1. Biogeochemical assessment of waters, sediments, soils and biota • ............................................................................................................ 277-289 J.C. Colombo, A. Barreda, C. Bilos, N. Cappelletti, S. Demichelis, P. Lombardi, M.C. Migoya, C. Skorupka and G. Suárez Ozone exposure induces the activation of leaf senescence-related processes and morphological and growth changes in seedlings of Mediterranean tree species • ................................................ 291-300 Àngela Ribas, Josep Peñuelas, Susana Elvira and Benjamín S. Gimeno Review of disposal technologies for chromated copper arsenate (CCA) treated wood waste, with detailed analyses of thermochemical conversion processes • ....................................................... 301-314 Lieve Helsen and Eric Van den Bulck PAH dissipation in a contaminated river sediment under oxic and anoxic conditions • ................. 315-322 C. Quantin, E.J. Joner, J.M. Portal and J. Berthelin PCBs and DDT in the serum of juvenile California sea lions: associations with vitamins A and E and thyroid hormones • ................................................................................................................... 323-332 Cathy Debier, Gina M. Ylitalo, Michael Weise, Frances Gulland, Daniel P. Costa, Burney J. Le Boeuf, Tanguy de Tillesse and Yvan Larondelle A lysimeter experiment to investigate the leaching of veterinary antibiotics through a clay soil and comparison with field data • ............................................................................................................ 333-341 Paul Kay, Paul A. Blackwell and Alistair B.A. Boxall Screening the wetland plant species Alisma plantago-aquatica, Carex rostrata and Phalaris arundinacea for innate tolerance to zinc and comparison with Eriophorum angustifolium and Festuca rubra Merlin • ..................................................................................................................... 343-351 David J. Matthews, Bridget M. Moran and Marinus L. Otte Assessing breeding potential of peregrine falcons based on chlorinated hydrocarbon concentrations in prey • ................................................................................................................... 353-361 J.E. Elliott, M.J. Miller and L.K. Wilson ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 23, No. 12, December 2004. ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY INTRA- AND INTERLABORATORY CALIBRATION OF THE DR CALUX® BIOASSAY FOR THE ANALYSIS OF DIOXINS AND DIOXIN-LIKE CHEMICALS IN SEDIMENTS Harrie T. Besselink, Cor Schipper, Hans Klamer, Pim Leonards, Henk Verhaar, Emiel Felzel, Albertinka J. Murk, John Thain, Kazunori Hosoe, Greet Schoeters, Juliette Legler and Bram Brouwer .................................................................................................................................................. 2781

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EFFECT OF ETHOXYLATE NUMBER AND ALKYL CHAIN LENGTH ON THE PATHWAY AND KINETICS OF LINEAR ALCOHOL ETHOXYLATE BIODEGRADATION IN ACTIVATED SLUDGE Nina R. Itrich and Thomas W. Federle .................................................................................................. 2790 BACTERIAL ENERGETICS, STOICHIOMETRY, AND KINETIC MODELING OF 2,4-DINITROTOLUENE BIODEGRADATION IN A BATCH RESPIROMETER Chunlong Zhang and Joseph B. Hughes ............................................................................................... 2799 IDENTIFICATION OF ESTROGENIC COMPOUNDS IN WASTEWATER EFFLUENT Norihide Nakada, Hiroshi Nyunoya, Masaru Nakamura, Akihiko Hara, Taisen Iguchi and Hideshige Takada .................................................................................................................................. 2807 ENHANCEMENT OF PHENANTHRENE SOLUBILIZATION AND BIODEGRADATION BY TREHALOSE LIPID BIOSURFACTANTS Jae-Soo Chang, Mark Radosevich, Yan Jin and Daniel K. Cha ............................................................ 2816 ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY SUBCELLULAR ACCUMULATION OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS IN THE GREEN ALGA CHLAMYDOMONAS REINHARDTII Thomas W. Jabusch and Deborah L. Swackhamer .............................................................................. 2823 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] A RANKING SYSTEM FOR THE EVALUATION OF INTERSEX CONDITION IN EUROPEAN FLOUNDER (PLATICHTHYS FLESUS) Kelly S. Bateman, Grant D. Stentiford and Stephen W. Feist ............................................................... 2831 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] ASSESSMENT OF THE TOXICITY OF TRIASULFURON AND ITS PHOTOPRODUCTS USING AQUATIC ORGANISMS Emmanuelle Vulliet, Corinne Emmelin, Jean-Marc Chovelon, Céline Chouteau and Bernard Clement .................................................................................................................................................. 2837 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] AN IN SITU TOXICITY IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION METHOD PART I: LABORATORY VALIDATION G. Allen Burton Jr. and Juanita F. Nordstrom ........................................................................................ 2844 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] AN IN SITU TOXICITY IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION METHOD PART II: FIELD VALIDATION G. Allen Burton Jr. and Juanita F. Nordstrom........................................................................................ 2851 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] INFLUENCE OF DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE ON SUSCEPTIBILITIES AND SENSITIVITIES OF SIMULIUM VITTATUM IS-7 AND SIMULIUM VITTATUM IIIL-1 (DIPTERA: SIMULIIDAE) TO CHLORPYRIFOS Alison H. Hyder, Jay P. Overmyer and Ray Noblet ............................................................................... 2856 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] AN AMPHIBIAN MODEL TO TEST THE EFFECTS OF XENOBIOTIC CHEMICALS ON DEVELOPMENT OF THE HEMATOPOIETIC SYSTEM Louise A. Rollins-Smith, B. Diane Hopkins and Laura K. Reinert ......................................................... 2863 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] GENOTOXICITY IN NATIVE FISH ASSOCIATED WITH AGRICULTURAL RUNOFF EVENTS Andrew Whitehead, Kathryn M. Kuivila, James L. Orlando, Sergey Kotelevtsev and Susan L. Anderson ................................................................................................................................................ 2868 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] ACCUMULATION OF TRIBUTYLTIN IN HYALELLA AZTECA AS AN INDICATOR OF CHRONIC TOXICITY: SURVIVAL, GROWTH, AND REPRODUCTION Adrienne J. Bartlett, Uwe Borgmann, D. George Dixon, Suzanne P. Batchelor and R. James Maguire .................................................................................................................................................. 2878 [Full-text Article] [PDF Version] INFLUENCE OF NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER SOURCE ON ACUTE COPPER, LEAD, AND CADMIUM TOXICITY TO RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) Melissa L. Schwartz, P. Jefferson Curtis and Richard C. Playle ........................................................... 2889 INFLUENCE OF MULTIPLE WATER-QUALITY CHARACTERISTICS ON COPPER TOXICITY TO FATHEAD MINNOWS (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS) Katherine L. Sciera, J. Jeffery Isely, Joseph R. Tomasso Jr. and Stephen J. Klaine ............................ 2900

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PREDICTING MATERNAL BODY BURDENS OF ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES FROM EGGS AND EVIDENCE OF MATERNAL TRANSFER IN ALLIGATOR MISSISSIPPIENSIS Richard H. Rauschenberger, María S. Sepúlveda, Jon J. Wiebe, Nancy J. Szabo and Timothy S. Gross ...................................................................................................................................................... 2906 POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBON LEVELS IN MUSSELS FROM PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND, ALASKA, USA, DOCUMENT THE RETURN TO BASELINE CONDITIONS Paul D. Boehm, David S. Page, John S. Brown, Jerry M. Neff and William A. Burns ........................... 2916 STRESS AND IMMUNE RESPONSES OF NESTLING TREE SWALLOWS (TACHYCINETA BICOLOR) AND EASTERN BLUEBIRDS (SIALIA SIALIS) EXPOSED TO NONPERSISTENT PESTICIDES AND p,p′-DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLOROETHYLENE IN APPLE ORCHARDS OF SOUTHERN ONTARIO, CANADA Gregory J. Mayne, Pamela A. Martin, Christine A. Bishop and Herman J. Boermans .......................... 2930 COMPARATIVE TOXICITY OF OIL, DISPERSANT, AND OIL PLUS DISPERSANT TO SEVERAL MARINE SPECIES Chris Fuller, James Bonner, Cheryl Page, Andrew Ernest, Thomas McDonald and Susanne McDonald ............................................................................................................................................... 2941 VALIDATION OF AN AMPHIBIAN SPERM INHIBITION TOXICOLOGICAL TEST METHOD USING ZINC Jennie R. Christensen, Christine A. Bishop, John S. Richardson, Bruce Pauli and John Elliott ........... 2950 DIETARY MERCURY EXPOSURE AND BIOACCUMULATION IN SOUTHERN LEOPARD FROG (RANA SPHENOCEPHALA) LARVAE Jason M. Unrine and Charles H. Jagoe ................................................................................................. 2956 ADVERSE EFFECTS OF ECOLOGICALLY RELEVANT DIETARY MERCURY EXPOSURE IN SOUTHERN LEOPARD FROG (RANA SPHENOCEPHALA) LARVAE Jason M. Unrine, Charles H. Jagoe, William A. Hopkins and Heather A. Brant .................................... 2964 COPPER TOXICITY IN RELATION TO SURFACE WATER-DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER: BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS TO DAPHNIA MAGNA Kees J.M. Kramer, Robbert G. Jak, Bert van Hattum, Ria N. Hooftman and John J.G. Zwolsman ...... 2971 PREDICTING THE TOXICITY OF CHROMIUM IN SEDIMENTS Walter J. Berry, Warren S. Boothman, Jonathan R. Serbst and Philip A. Edwards .............................. 2981 HAZARD/RISK ASSESSMENT PROBABILISTIC ENVIRONMENTAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF ZINC IN DUTCH SURFACE WATERS Patrick A. Van Sprang, Frederik A.M. Verdonck, Peter A. Vanrolleghem, Marnix L. Vangheluwe and Colin R. Janssen ............................................................................................................................. 2993 MODELING SELENIUM BIOACCUMULATION THROUGH ARTHROPOD FOOD WEBS IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY, CALIFORNIA, USA Christian E. Schlekat, David G. Purkerson and Samuel N. Luoma ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005. Environmental Chemistry MOBILIZATION OF PESTICIDES ON AN AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE FLOODED BY A TORRENTIAL STORM David B. Donald, Fraser G. Hunter, Ed Sverko, Bernard D. Hill and Jim Syrgiannis .................................. 2 EFFECT OF COEXISTING COMPOUNDS ON THE SORPTION AND REDUCTION OF TRICHLOROETHYLENE WITH IRON Hyun-Hee Cho and Jae-Woo Park ............................................................................................................ 11 QUANTITATION OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS IN FISH FOR HUMAN CANCER RISK ASSESSMENT: A COMPARATIVE CASE STUDY Kevin T. Connor, Michelle Eversen, Steave H. Su and Brent L. Finley ..................................................... 17 TRACKING ACIDIC PHARMACEUTICALS, CAFFEINE, AND TRICLOSAN THROUGH THE WASTEWATER TREATMENT PROCESS Paul M. Thomas and Gregory D. Foster .................................................................................................... 25 DESORPTION KINETICS OF FLUORANTHENE AND TRIFLURALIN FROM LAKE HURON AND LAKE ERIE, USA, SEDIMENTS

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Marc S. Greenberg, G. Allen Burton, Jr, Peter F. Landrum, Matti T. Leppänen and Jussi V. K. Kukkonen ................................................................................................................................................... 31 FATE OF OXYTETRACYCLINE IN STREAMS RECEIVING AQUACULTURE DISCHARGES: MODEL SIMULATIONS Peter E. Rose and Joel A. Pedersen ......................................................................................................... 40 AIR–WATER GAS EXCHANGE OF CHLORINATED PESTICIDES IN FOUR LAKES SPANNING A 1,205 METER ELEVATION RANGE IN THE CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS Andrew C. Wilkinson, Lynda E. Kimpe and Jules M. Blais ........................................................................ 61 Environmental Toxicology QUANTITATIVE BIO-IMAGING ANALYSIS FOR EVALUATION OF SEXUAL DIFFERENTIATION IN GERM CELLS OF olvas-GFP/ST-II YI MEDAKA (ORYZIAS LATIPES) NANOINJECTED IN OVO WITH ETHINYLESTRADIOL Takeshi Hano, Yuji Oshima, Toshiaki Oe, Masato Kinoshita, Minoru Tanaka, Yuko Wakamatsu, Kenjiro Ozato and Tsuneo Honjo ............................................................................................................... 70 EFFECTS OF THE PYRETHROID ESFENVALERATE ON LIFE-CYCLE TRAITS AND POPULATION DYNAMICS OF CHIRONOMUS RIPARIUS—IMPORTANCE OF EXPOSURE SCENARIO Valery E. Forbes and Anders Cold ............................................................................................................ 78 ACUTE AND CHRONIC TOXICITY OF IMIDAZOLIUM-BASED IONIC LIQUIDS ON DAPHNIA MAGNA Randall J. Bernot, Michael A. Brueseke, Michelle A. Evans-White and Gary A. Lamberti ....................... 87 EXPOSURE AND EFFECTS OF 2,3,7,8-TETRACHLORODIBENZO-p-DIOXIN IN TREE SWALLOWS (TACHYCINETA BICOLOR) NESTING ALONG THE WOONASQUATUCKET RIVER, RHODE ISLAND, USA Christine M. Custer, Thomas W. Custer, Cornell J. Rosiu, Mark J. Melancon, John W. Bickham and Cole W. Matson .................................................................................................................................. 93 SINGLE VERSUS MULTIPLE OCCUPANCY—EFFECTS ON TOXICITY PARAMETERS MEASURED ON EISENIA FETIDA IN LEAD NITRATE–TREATED SOIL Mark Currie, Mark E. Hodson, Rebecca E. Arnold and Caroline J. Langdon .......................................... 110 AROCLOR 1254 EXPOSURE REDUCES DISEASE RESISTANCE AND INNATE IMMUNE RESPONSES IN FASTED ARCTIC CHARR Alec G. Maule, Even H. Jørgensen, Mathilakath M. Vijayan and Jan-Eirik A. Killie ................................ 117 MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS IN KING PENGUIN (APTENODYTES PATAGONICUS) FEATHERS AT CROZET ISLANDS (SUB-ANTARCTIC): TEMPORAL TREND BETWEEN 1966–1974 AND 2000–2001 Renaud Scheifler, Michel Gauthier-Clerc, Céline Le Bohec, Nadia Crini, Michaël CŒurdassier, Pierre-Marie Badot, Patrick Giraudoux and Yvon Le Maho ..................................................................... 125 UPTAKE AND DEPURATION OF PARALYTIC SHELLFISH TOXINS IN THE GREEN-LIPPED MUSSEL, PERNA VIRIDIS: A DYNAMIC MODEL Ashley M.Y. Li, Peter K.N. Yu, Dennis P.H. Hsieh, Wen-Xiong Wang, Rudolf S.S. Wu and Paul K.S. Lam .................................................................................................................................................. 129 COMPARATIVE THRESHOLDS FOR ACETYLCHOLINESTERASE INHIBITION AND BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENT IN COHO SALMON EXPOSED TO CHLORPYRIFOS Jason F. Sandahl, David H. Baldwin, Jeffrey J. Jenkins and Nathaniel L. Scholz .................................. 136 COVERT SIGNAL DISRUPTION: ANTI-ECDYSTEROIDAL ACTIVITY OF BISPHENOL A INVOLVES CROSS TALK BETWEEN SIGNALING PATHWAYS Xueyan Mu, Cynthia V. Rider, Gap Soo Hwang, Heather Hoy and Gerald A. LeBlanc .......................... 146 ORAL BIOAVAILABILITY OF GLYPHOSATE: STUDIES USING TWO INTESTINAL CELL LINES Luba Vasiluk, Linda J. Pinto and Margo M. Moore .................................................................................. 153 SEASONAL STUDY ON THE Cd, Se, AND Zn UPTAKE BY NATURAL COASTAL PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES Wen-Xiong Wang, Robert C.H. Dei and Huasheng Hong ....................................................................... 161 A FIELD-BASED MICROCOSM METHOD TO ASSESS THE EFFECTS OF POLLUTED URBAN STREAM SEDIMENTS ON AQUATIC MACROINVERTEBRATES Vincent Pettigrove and Ary Hoffmann ...................................................................................................... 170 EFFECT OF VOLATILE HYDROCARBON FRACTIONS ON MOBILITY AND EARTHWORM UPTAKE OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS FROM SOILS AND SOIL/LAMPBLACK MIXTURES

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Bill W. Bogan, Kate E. Beardsley, Wendy R. Sullivan, Thomas D. Hayes and Bhupendra K. Soni ....... 181 RESPONSES OF MOLECULAR INDICATORS OF EXPOSURE IN MESOCOSMS: COMMON CARP (CYPRINUS CARPIO) EXPOSED TO THE HERBICIDES ALACHLOR AND ATRAZINE Lina W. Chang, Gregory P. Toth, Denise A. Gordon, David W. Graham, John R. Meier, Charles W. Knapp, F. Jerry deNoyelles Jr., Scott Campbell and David L. Lattier ................................................ 190 ASSESSMENT OF WHOLE EFFLUENT TOXICITY ON AQUATIC SNAILS: BIOACCUMULATION OF Cr, Zn, AND Fe, AND INDIVIDUAL EFFECTS IN BIOASSAYS Michaël C;OEurdassier, Annette de Vaufleury, Nadia Crini, Renaud Scheifler and Pierre-Marie Badot ........................................................................................................................................................ 198 EFFECTS OF OZONE EXPOSURE ON NONSPECIFIC PHAGOCYTIC CAPACITY OF PULMONARY MACROPHAGES FROM AN AMPHIBIAN, BUFO MARINUS Michael R. Dohm, William J. Mautz, Joy A. Andrade, Kapuaola S. Gellert, Loney J. Salas-Ferguson, Nicola Nicolaisen and Nicole Fujie ......................................................................................... 205 TIME-DEPENDENT TOXICITY OF DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLOROETHYLENE TO HYALELLA AZTECA Peter F. Landrum, Jeffery A. Steevens, Michael McElroy, Duane C. Gossiaux, Jocelyn S. Lewis and Sander D. Robinson .......................................................................................................................... 211 REPRODUCTIVE IMPAIRMENT IN ZEBRA FINCHES (TAENIOPYGIA GUTTATA) Almira L. Hoogesteijn, Timothy J. DeVoogd, Fred W. Quimby, Tony De Caprio and George V. Kollias ....................................................................................................................................................... 219 Hazard/Risk Assessment SETTING SITE-SPECIFIC WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS BY USING TISSUE RESIDUE CRITERIA AND BIOACCUMULATION DATA. PART 1. METHODOLOGY John E. Toll, Lucinda M. Tear, David K. DeForest, Kevin V. Brix and William J. Adams 2........................ 24 SETTING SITE-SPECIFIC WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS BY USING TISSUE RESIDUE THRESHOLDS AND BIOACCUMULATION DATA. PART 2. CALCULATING SITE-SPECIFIC SELENIUM WATER-QUALITY STANDARDS FOR PROTECTING FISH AND BIRDS Kevin V. Brix, John E. Toll, Lucinda M. Tear, David K. DeForest and William J. Adams ........................ 231 RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS AND HEALTH STATUS IN HARBOR PORPOISES (PHOCOENA PHOCOENA) STRANDED IN THE UNITED KINGDOM Paul D. Jepson, Peter M. Bennett, Robert Deaville, Colin R. Allchin, John R. Baker and Robin J. Law ........................................................................................................................................................... 238 ERRATUM ............................................................................................................................................... 249 FAO FISHERIES CIRCULAR: No. 1001, 2004: Global Aquaculture Outlook in the Next Decades: An Analysis of National Aquaculture Production Forecasts to 2030. FAO FISHERIES REPORT: No. 738, 2004: Report of the Expert Consultation on Interactions Between Sea Turtles and Fisheries Within an Ecosystem Context. Rome, Italy, 9-12 March 2004. FAO FISHERIES REPORT: No. 742, 2004: Report of the Third Intergovernmental Consultation on the Establishment of a Southwest Indian Ocean Fisheries Commission. Nairobi, Kenya, 27-30 January 2004. FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 442, 2004: Application of risk assessment in the fish industry. FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 444, 2004: Assessment and Management of Seafood Safety and Quality. FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:

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No. 452, 2004. Cambio Climático y Pesquerías regionales en el futuro: Análisis en Colaboración. FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 465, 2004: The Conservation and Management of Shared Fish Stocks: Legal and Economic Aspects. GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL: Vol. 21, No. 8, December 2004. Quantifying CaCO3 Microprecipitates Within Developing Surface Mats of Marine Stromatolites Using GIS and Digital Image Analysis ..................................................................................................... 491 Alexandru Petrisor; Tomohiro Kawaguchi; Alan Decho Involvement of Microorganisms in the Formation of Carbonate Speleothems in the Cervo Cave (L'Aquila-Italy) .......................................................................................................................................... 497 Paola Cacchio; Rosita Contento; Claudia Ercole; Giorgio Cappuccio; Maria Martinez; Aldo Lepidi Experimental Measurements of the Adsorption of Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas mendocina Onto Fe-Oxyhydroxide-Coated and Uncoated Quartz Grains................................................................. 511 David Ams; Jeremy Fein; Hailiang Dong; Patricia Maurice Bacterial Degradation of Dissolved Organic Matter from Two Northern Michigan Streams................... 521 Katherine Young; Patricia Maurice; Kathryn Docherty; Scott Bridgham Biosignatures and Bacterial Diversity in Hydrothermal Deposits of Solfatara Crater, Italy .................... 529 Mihaela Glamoclija; Laurence Garrel; Jonathan Berthon; Purificación López-García Further Readings in Geomicrobiology .................................................................................................... 543 ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 61, No. 8, December 2004. Diel vertical distribution of fish larvae during the winter-mixing period in the Northwestern Mediterranean • ........................................................................................................................... 1243-1252 A. Sabatés Age and individual growth of Mesodesma mactroides (Bivalvia) in the southernmost range of its distribution • ................................................................................................................................ 1253-1259 Sandra M. Fiori and Enrique M. Morsán Impact of experimental trawling on the benthic assemblage along the Tuscany coast (north Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy) • ............................................................................................................... 1260-1266 Anna Maria De Biasi Feeding preferences of herring (Clupea harengus) and sprat (Sprattus sprattus) in the southern Baltic Sea • .................................................................................................................................. 1267-1277 Michele Casini, Massimiliano Cardinale and Fredrik Arrhenius Vertical distribution and feeding patterns in fish foraging on the krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica • 1278-1290 M.S.R. Onsrud, S. Kaartvedt, A. Røstad and T.A. Klevjer An assessment of the upstream migration and reproductive behaviour of allis shad (Alosa alosa L.) using acoustic tracking • ........................................................................................................ 1291-1304 M.L. Acolas, M.L. Bégout Anras, V. Véron, H. Jourdan, M.R. Sabatié and J.L. Baglinière Performance of precautionary reference points in providing management advice on North Sea fish stocks • ........................................................................................................................................ 1305-1312 G.J. Piet and J.C. Rice The diet of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) in southern Australian waters • .............. 1313-1329 Karen Evans and Mark A. Hindell Mixed and Multi-Stock Fisheries: Introduction • EDITORIAL Page 1330 Laurence T. Kell, Walter W. Crozier and Christopher M. Legault Possible solutions to some challenges facing fisheries scientists and managers • ................... 1331-1343 Randall M. Peterman Managing Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) in the mixed stock environment: challenges and considerations • ........................................................................................................................... 1344-1358 W.W. Crozier, P-J. Schön, G. Chaput, E.C.E. Potter, N. Ó Maoiléidigh and J.C. MacLean

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Estimating and forecasting pre-fishery abundance of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) in the Northeast Atlantic for the management of mixed-stock fisheries • ............................................. 1359-1369 E.C.E. Potter, W.W. Crozier, P-J. Schön, M.D. Nicholson, D.L. Maxwell, E. Prévost, J. Erkinaro, G. Gudbergsson, L. Karlsson, L.P. Hansen et al. Application of pre-fishery abundance modelling and Bayesian hierarchical stock and recruitment analysis to the provision of precautionary catch advice for Irish salmon (Salmo salar L.) fisheries • ...................................................................................................................................................... 1370-1378 N. Ó Maoiléidigh, P. McGinnity, E. Prévost, E.C.E Potter, P. Gargan, W.W. Crozier, P. Mills and W. Roche ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE: Vol. XVI, No. 3, 2004. BLOOD ORANGE SLICES PACKAGED WITH FILMS OF DIFFERENT PERMEABILITIES:CHEMICAL, MICROBIOLOGICAL AND SENSORY STUDIES. By: Caggia, C.; Lanza, C. M.; Bellomo, S. E.; Pannuzzo, P.; Bianco, M. Lo; Restuccia, C.; Rapisarda, P.. ................... 275 EFFECT OF CALCIUM AND FUNGICIDE TREATMENTS ON POSTHARVEST FUNGAL DISORDERS IN SWEET CHERRIES STORED UNDER NORMAL AND MODIFIED ATMOSPHERE PACKAGING CONDITIONS. By: Eris, A.; Tezcan, H.; Akbudak, B.; Karabulut, O. A.. ............................................................................................................................................................. 293 DETERMINATION OF RESVERATROL AND OTHER PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS IN EXPERIMENTAL WINES FROM GRAPES SUBJECTED TO DIFFERENT PESTICIDE TREATMENTS. By: Dugo, G.; Saitta, M.; Giuffrida, D.; Vilasi, F.; La Torre, G. L.. ................................. 305 STABILITY OF ANTHOCYANINS FROM GRAPE (VITIS VINIFERA L.) SKINS WITH TANNIC ACID IN A MODEL SYSTEM. By: Falcão, L. D.; Gauche, C.; Barros, D. M.; Prudêncio, E. S.; Gris, E. F.; Sant'Anna, E. S.; Ogliari, P. J.; Luiz, M. T. B. ................................................................................ 323 OXIDATIVE STATUS OF EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OILS: HPLC EVALUATION. By: Rovellini, P.; Cortesi, N.. ............................................................................................................................................... 333 INFLUENCE OF BACTROCERA OLEAE INFESTATION ON OLIVE OIL QUALITY DURING RIPENING OF CHEMLAL OLIVES. By: Tamendjari, A.; Angerosa, F.; Bellal, M. M.. ............................ 343 EFFECT OF OLIVE FRUIT FLY INFESTATION ON THE QUALITY OF OLIVE OIL FROM CULTIVARS COBRANÇOSA,MADURAL AND VERDEAL TRANSMONTANA. By: Pereira, J. A.; Alves, M. R.; Casal, S.; Oliveira, M. B. P. P.. .......................................................................................... 355 AEROBIC HETEROTROPHIC MICROBIAL POPULATIONS ISOLATED FROM A COOKED VEGETABLE. By: Burgalassi, F.; Fancelli, S.; Settimelli, M.; Cioni, L.; Lanzilao, I.; Fani, R.. ................ 367 DECREASE OF HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN LEVELS IN HELA TUMOR CELLS BY RED WINE EXTRACTS. By: Roussou, I.; Lambropoulos, I.; Pagoulatos, G. N.; Roussis, I. G.. ............................... 381 EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT ENOLOGICAL TREATMENTS ON DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN WINES. By: Castellari, M.; Simonato, B.; Tornielli, G. B.; Spinelli, P.; Ferrarini, R.. ............................................. 387 JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 31, No. 12, December 2004. Charming complexity .............................................................................................................................. 1881 What is a node? ...................................................................................................................................... 1883 Michael Heads A touch of theory Species diversity and endemism of five major Malesian islands: diversityarea relationships ................ 1893 Marco C. Roos, Paul J. A. Keßler, S. Robbert Gradstein, Pieter Baas The applicability of Rapoport's rule to the marine molluscs of the Americas ......................................... 1909 R. R. Fortes, R. S. Absalão The nature of spatial transitions in the Arctic.......................................................................................... 1917 H. E. Epstein, J. Beringer, W. A. Gould, A. H. Lloyd, C. D. Thompson, F. S. Chapin III, G. J. Michaelson, C. L. Ping, T. S. Rupp, D. A. Walker Birds and plants Relationships between the demography and distribution of two bird-dispersed plants in an island archipelago.............................................................................................................................................. 1935 K. C. Burns Birdflower interactions in the Macaronesian islands............................................................................... 1945 Alfredo Valido, Yoko L. Dupont, Jens M. Olesen

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Basic biogeographies Freshwater diatom biogeography in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago................................................... 1955 Giselle Bouchard, K. Gajewski, P. B. Hamilton A marine fish follows Wallace's Line: the phylogeography of the three-spot seahorse (Hippocampus trimaculatus, Syngnathidae, Teleostei) in Southeast Asia ............................................. 1975 Sara A. Lourie, Amanda C. J. Vincent Zoogeography of the southern African ascidian fauna ........................................................................... 1987 Carmen Primo, Elsa Vázquez Descriptive biogeography of Tomicus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) species in Spain ................................. 2011 D. Gallego, F. Cánovas, M. A. Esteve, J. Galián Historical and present distribution of coyote (Canis latrans) in Mexico and Central America ................ 2025 Mircea G. Hidalgo-Mihart, Lisette Cantú-Salazar, Alberto González-Romero, Carlos A. López-González Vegetation changes and megafaunal extinction in South America: comments on de Vivo and Carmignotto (2004) ................................................................................................................................. 2039 Astolfo G.M. Araujo, Walter A. Neves, Luís Beethoven Piló Do we need a process-based approach to nature conservation? Continuing the parable of Green Mountain, Ascension Island .................................................................................................................... 2041 David M. Wilkinson Getting to grips with biological diversity measurement........................................................................... 2043 Dave Raffaelli What about the plants? ........................................................................................................................... 2043 Paddy Coker JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH: Special Issue No. 4, Fall 2004: NERRS research and Monitoring. A Nationally Integrated Program. JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH: Vol. 20, No. 3, Summer 2004. Alternatives to the Mathematical Modeling of Beaches. J. Andrew G. Cooper and Orrin H. Pilkey 641–644. Short-term Observations of Suspended Particulate Matter in a Macro-tidal Inverse Estuary: The Upper Gulf of California. Luis G. Alvarez and Sarah E. Jones ........................................................ 645–654. Multimodal Analysis of the Acoustic Field at the Río de la Plata Estuary. Silvia R. Salvadores and Marta I.E. de Milou........................................................................................................................... 655–661. A Modelling Study of Coastal Upwelling Driven by Wind and Meanders of the Brazil Current. Renato M. Castelao, Edmo J. D. Campos, and Jerry L. Miller ........................................................ 662–671. Cyclic Sand Bar Migration on a Spit-platform in the Danish Wadden Sea—Spit-platform Morphology Related to Variations in Water Level. Niels Vinther, Jørgen Nielsen, and Troels Aagaard............................................................................................................................................ 672–679. Holocene Gulf Levels: Recognition Issues and an Updated Sea-Level Curve. Ervin G. Otvos...... 680–699. Geomorphological Features and Evolution of the Ensenada de Atacames (Provincia de Esmeraldas, Ecuador). P. R. Federici and G. Rodolfi ..................................................................... 700–708. Hydrochemistry in Reclaimed Lands of the 2000 Olympic Games Site, Sydney, Australia. Jeong-Yul Suh, G.F. Birch, and K. Hughes ................................................................................................ 709–721. Long-Term Effects of Nitrogen Fertilization on Plant Community Structure on a Coastal Barrier Island Dune Chronosequence. Frank P. Day, Christine Conn, Edward Crawford, and Mark Stevenson ........................................................................................................................................ 722–730. Effective Form Roughness of Ripples for Waves. Hyoseob Kim..................................................... 731–738. CZM Applications of Argus Coastal Imaging at the Gold Coast, Australia. Ian L. Turner, S.G.J. Aarninkhof, T.D.T. Dronkers, and J. McGrath ................................................................................. 739–752. Field Measurements of Beachface Salinity Structure using Cross-Borehole Resistivity Imaging. Ian L. Turner and R. Ian Acworth........................................................................................................... 753–760. Germination and Early-Seedling Establishment Capacity of Pancratium maritimum L. (Amaryllidaceae) on Coastal Dunes in the North-Western Mediterranean. Elena Balestri and F. Cinelli ............................................................................................................................................... 761–770. Sediment Transport Paths in the Westerschelde: One-Dimensional Alternative to Determine Sediment Trend. Paulo S. Lucio, Henri S. Dupont, and Emerson C. Bodevan............................... 771–775.

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Effect of El Niño (1997–98) on Beaches of the Peninsular Gulf Coast of Florida. Tiffany L. Hepner and Richard A. Davis Jr. .................................................................................................................. 776–791. Examining Local Ecological Knowledge of Hurricane Impacts in a Mangrove Forest Using an Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) Approach. John M. Kovacs, Jacek Malczewski, and Francisco Flores-Verdugo ................................................................................................................................ 792–800. The Impact of Damming the Ord River on the Fine Sediment Budget in Cambridge Gulf, Northwestern Australia. E. Wolanski, S. Spagnol, and D. Williams................................................. 801–807. A Comparison of Inter-Site, Intra-Site, Intra-Sample and Instrument Variability in Environmental Magnetic Data: An Example Based on the Gwendraeth Estuary, South Wales, U.K.. Colin A. Booth, John Walden, Adrian Neal, John P. Smith, and Edward Morgan ........................................ 808–813. Flow Field in the Inner Shelf Along the Central East Coast of India During the Southwest Monsoon Season. Thota V. Narasimha Rao ................................................................................................... 814–827. Shoreline Changes and Near Shore Processes Along Ennore Coast, East Coast of South India. P. Kasinatha Pandian, S. Ramesh, M. V. Ramana Murthy, S. Ramachandran, and S. Thayumanavan828–845. Relationship between Indicators of Faecal Pollution and Presence of Pathogenic Microorganisms in Coastal Seawaters. G. Gabutti, A. De Donno, R. Erroi, D. Liaci, F. Bagordo, and M.T. Montagna846–852. Process Based Modeling of Total Longshore Sediment Transport. Kevin A. Haas and Daniel M. Hanes............................................................................................................................................... 853–861. Seasonal Changes in a Sandy Beach Fish Assemblage at Canto Grande, Santa Catarina, South Brazil. João P. Barreiros, Vicente Figna, Maurício Hostim-Silva, and Ricardo S. Santos............... 862–870. Terrestrial Methods for Monitoring Cliff Erosion in an Urban Environment. S.A. Gulyaev and J.S. Buckeridge ....................................................................................................................................... 871–878. Computing the Discharge through Granular Material Aquifers using the Equations of Fluid Mechanics. Adel Kamel ................................................................................................................... 879–883. Mapping Shoreline Position Using Airborne Laser Altimetry. William Robertson V, Dean Whitman, Keqi Zhang, and Stephen P. Leatherman ....................................................................................... 884–892. A Set of 3-D Nested Models for Tidal Propagation from the Argentinean Continental Shelf to the Río de la Plata Estuary—Part I. M2. C.G. Simionato, W. Dragani, M. Nuñez, and M. Engel ......... 893–912. Observations on the Stability St. Andrew Bay Inlets in Florida. Mamta Jain, Ashish J. Mehta, Jacobus van de Kreeke, and Michael R. Dombrowski .................................................................... 913–919. Geoarchaeological Interpretation of the Canopic, Largest of the Relict Nile Delta Distributaries, Egypt. Jean-Daniel Stanley, Andrew G. Warne, and Gerard Schnepp ........................................... 920–930. Impact of Beach Restoration on the Deep-burrowing Ghost Shrimp, Callichirus islagrande. A. Lelania Bilodeau and Robert P. Bourgeois...................................................................................... 931–936. JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH: Vol. 20, No. 4, Fall 2004. ESR Dating of Coral Reef Terraces on Curaçao (Netherlands Antilles) with Estimates of Younger Pleistocene Sea Level Elevations. Gerhard Schellmann, Ulrich Radtke, Anja Scheffers, Franziska Whelan, and Dieter Kelletat ............................................................................................................. 947–957. Direct Sediment Dispersal from Mountain to Shore, with Bypassing via Three Human-Modified Channel Systems to Lake Annecy, SE France. Jean-Daniel Stanley and Thomas F. Jorstad ....... 958–969. The Role of Sedimentation in Estuarine Marsh Development within the San Francisco Estuary, California, USA. Steven D. Culberson, Theodore C. Foin, and Joshua N. Collins.......................... 970–979. Stratigraphy of Back-Barrier Coastal Dunes, Northern North Carolina and Southern Virginia. K.G. Havholm, D.V. Ames, G.R. Whittecar, B.A. Wenell, S.R. Riggs, H.M. Jol, G.W. Berger, and M.A. Holmes ............................................................................................................................................. 980–999. Tidal Hydrodynamics in Golfo Nuevo, Argentina, and the Adjacent Continental Shelf. Carlos A. Mazio, Walter C. Dragani, Fernando J. Caviglia, and Jorge L. Pousa ........................................ 1000–1011. Picture Essay of Pacific Island Coasts. William R. Dickinson ..................................................... 1012–1034. Late Pleistocene to Holocene Wetlands Now Covered by Sand, along the Carmel Coast, Israel, and their Relation to Human Settlement: An Example from Dor. D. Sivan, D. Eliyahu, and A. Raban........................................................................................................................................... 1035–1048. Modeling the Effect of Tidal Wetting and Drying on Shore Platform Development. Alan S. Trenhaile ...................................................................................................................................... 1049–1060. Artificial Neural Networks for Wave Propagation. S.N. Londhe and M.C. Deo ........................... 1061–1069. Impacts of Bauxite Sediment Inputs on a Carbonate-Dominated Embayment, Discovery Bay, Jamaica. Christopher T. Perry and Kevin G. Taylor .................................................................... 1070–1079.

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Tourism-Generated Earnings in the Coastal Zone: A Regional Analysis. Yehuda L. Klein, Jeffrey P. Osleeb, and Mariano R. Viola.................................................................................................. 1080–1088. Investigation of Hydrocarbon Pollution in the Vicinity of United Arab Emirates Coasts Using Visible and Near Infrared Remote Sensing Data. F. M. Howari .............................................................. 1089–1095. Erosion Measurements in Linear, Oscillatory, and Combined Oscillatory and Linear Flow Regimes. Richard Jepsen, Jesse Roberts, and Joseph Gailani.................................................. 1096–1101. Coastal Change and Beach Ridges along the Northwest Coast of Peru: Image and GIS Analysis of the Chira, Piura, and Colán Beach-Ridge Plains. Stacy Shafer Rogers, Daniel H. Sandweiss, Kirk A. Maasch, Daniel F. Belknap, and Peggy Agouris.............................................................. 1102–1125. Potential Bioavailability of Heavy Metals in Surface Sediments from the Altata-Ensenada del Pabellón Lagoon, SE Gulf of California. Carlos Green-Ruiz and Federico Páez-Osuna............ 1126–1134. Wave Transformation Modeling at Cape Fear River Entrance, North Carolina. Edward F. Thompson, Jane McKee Smith, and Herman C. Miller ............................................................... 1135–1154. Seasonal Dynamics of a Microtidal Pocket Beach with Posidonia oceanica Seabeds (Mallorca, Spain). G. Basterretxea, A. Orfila, A. Jordi, B. Casas, P. Lynett, P.L.F. Liu, C. M. Duarte, and J. Tintoré .......................................................................................................................................... 1155–1164. Using Hyperspectral Imaging for the Assessment of Mudflat Surface Stability. G.M. Smith, A.G. Thomson, I. Möller, and J.C. Kromkamp ..................................................................................... 1165–1175. Macrobenthic Distribution Patterns at a Sewage Disposal Site in the Inner Shelf off Mar del Plata (SW Atlantic). Rodolfo Elías, Eduardo A. Vallarino, Marcelo Scagliola, and Federico I. Isla ...... 1176–1182. Modeling the Influence of Wind and Rivers on Current, Salinity and Temperature over the French Guiana Continental Shelf during the Rainy Season. Cristèle Chevalier, Melika Baklouti, and Alfred Ramamonjiarisoa ......................................................................................................................... 1183–1197. Importance of Storm Events in Controlling Ecosystem Structure and Function in a Florida Gulf Coast Estuary. Stephen E. Davis III, Jaye E. Cable, Daniel L. Childers, Carlos Coronado-Molina, John W. Day Jr, Clinton D. Hittle, Christopher J. Madden, Enrique Reyes, David Rudnick, and Fred Sklar..................................................................................................................................... 1198–1208. Incorporation of a Mass-Conserving Inundation Scheme into a Three Dimensional Storm Surge Model. Lian Xie, Leonard J. Pietrafesa, and Machuan Peng ...................................................... 1209–1223. Designing Offshore Breakwaters Using Empirical Relationships: A Case Study from Norfolk, United Kingdom. Frank Thomalla and Chris E. Vincent .............................................................. 1224–1230. Spatial Variability of Wave Data from Todos Santos Bay, Baja California, Mexico. Asdrubal Martinez-Diaz-De-Leon................................................................................................................ 1231–1236. Evidence of Anthropogenic Nitrogen Enrichment of the Littoral Waters of East Central Florida. Peter J. Barile............................................................................................................................... 1237–1245. A Simple Low Cost Method for One Person Beach Profiling. Irene Delgado and Graham Lloyd1246–1252. JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY: Vol. 24, No. 4, November 2004. LARVAL MORPHOLOGY OF A RECENTLY RECOGNIZED BARNACLE, CHTHAMALUS NEGLECTUS (CIRRIPEDIA: THORACICA: CHTHAMALIDAE), FROM HONG KONG. Yan Yan and Benny K. K. Chan ..................................................................................................................... 519–528. ASPECTS OF THE ECOLOGY OF LAMPROGLENA CLARIAE (COPEPODA: LERNAEIDAE) FROM THE VAAL RIVER SYSTEM, SOUTH AFRICA. A. M. Tsotetsi, A. Avenant-Oldewage, and S. N. Mashego ................................................................................................................................. 529–536. MORPHOLOGY OF THE SIXTH LIMB OF THE CYPRIDINIDAE (OSTRACODA: MYODOCOPINA). Louis S. Kornicker ............................................................................................. 537–540. MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE GENUS PSEUDOMMA (PERACARIDA: MYSIDA). Kenneth Meland and Endre Willassen................................................. 541–557. DISTRIBUTION OF THE NEUSTONIC ISOPOD IDOTEA METALLICA IN RELATION TO SHELF-SLOPE FRONTAL STRUCTURES. Pere Abelló, Guillermo Guerao, and Meritxell Codina ........... 558–566. A NEW GENUS AND SPECIES OF FRESHWATER TANAIDACEAN, PSEUDOHALMYRAPSEUDES AQUADULCIS (APSEUDOMORPHA: PARAPSEUDIDAE), FROM NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA. Kim Larsen and Tom Hansknecht................................. 567–575. LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF CRANGON URITAI (DECAPODA: CRANGONIDAE) REARED IN THE LABORATORY. Hui Yu Li and Sung Yun Hong...................................................................... 576–591.

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THE CAROTENOPROTEINS DURING EMBRYOGENESIS AND LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EUROPEAN LOBSTER HOMARUS GAMMARUS. Desy M. H. Mantiri, Geneviève Nègre-Sadargues, Jose-Carlos G. Milicua, and René Castillo................................................................... 592–602. MORPHOLOGICAL AND GENETIC COMPARISONS OF GOLDEN CRAYFISH, ORCONECTES LUTEUS, AND RUSTY CRAYFISH, O. RUSTICUS, WITH RANGE CORRECTIONS IN IOWA AND MINNESOTA. James E. Wetzel, William J. Poly, and James W. Fetzner Jr.......................... 603–617. INFESTATION BY PSEUDIONE HUMBOLDTENSIS (BOPYRIDAE) IN THE SQUAT LOBSTERS CERVIMUNIDA JOHNI AND PLEURONCODES MONODON (GALATHEIDAE) OFF NORTHERN CHILE. M. Teresa González and Enzo Acuña ................................................................................ 618–624. ZOOGEOGRAPHY OF HERMIT CRABS (DECAPODA: DIOGENIDAE, PAGURIDAE) FROM FOUR COASTAL LAGOONS IN THE GULF OF MEXICO. A. Raz-Guzman, A. J. Sánchez, P. Peralta, and R. Florido ..................................................................................................................... 625–636. ZOEAL DEVELOPMENT OF PALAPEDIA INTEGRA (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA: XANTHIDAE) REARED IN THE LABORATORY. Hyun Sook Ko, Hye Suck An, and Stephen Sulkin.................. 637–651. FACTORS INFLUENCING REFUGE OCCUPATION BY STONE CRAB MENIPPE ADINA JUVENILES IN MISSISSIPPI SOUND. Virginia R. Shervette, Harriet M. Perry, Chet F. Rakocinski, and Patricia M. Biesiot ..................................................................................................................... 652–665. EMBRYOLOGY OF DECAPOD CRUSTACEANS I. EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE MANGROVE CRABS GONIOPSIS PULCHRA AND ARATUS PISONII (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA). Marcelo García-Guerrero and Michel E. Hendrickx............................................... 666–672. SEMIDOME BUILDING AS SEXUAL SIGNALING IN THE FIDDLER CRAB UCA LACTEA (BRACHYURA: OCYPODIDAE). Tae Won Kim, John H. Christy, and Jae C. Choe ...................... 673–679. JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY: Vol. 92, No. 6, December 2004. Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculation, interpretation and comparison when census intervals vary .................................................................................................. 929 SIMON L. LEWIS, OLIVER L. PHILLIPS, DOUGLAS SHEIL, BARBARA VINCETI, TIMOTHY R. BAKER, SANDRA BROWN, ANDREW W. GRAHAM, NIRO HIGUCHI, DAVID W. HILBERT, WILLIAM F. LAURANCE, JEAN LEJOLY, YADVINDER MALHI, ABEL MONTEAGUDO, PERCY NÚÑEZ VARGAS, BONAVENTURE SONKÉ, NUR SUPARDI , M.N. , JOHN W. TERBORGH, RODOLFO VÁSQUEZ MARTÍNEZ Long-term canopy dynamics in a large area of temperate old-growth beech (Fagus crenata) forest: analysis by aerial photographs and digital elevation models ................................................................... 945 YUKO HENBO, AKEMI ITAYA, NAOYUKI NISHIMURA, SHIN-ICHI YAMAMOTO Factors predisposing episodic drought-induced tree mortality in Nothofagus site, climatic sensitivity and growth trends .................................................................................................................... 954 MARIA LAURA SUAREZ, LUCIANA GHERMANDI, THOMAS KITZBERGER Novel phenotypes among early generation hybrids of two Louisiana iris species: flooding experiments .............................................................................................................................................. 967 JILL A. JOHNSTON, LISA A. DONOVAN, MICHAEL L. ARNOLD Plant isolation reduces outcross pollen receipt in a partially self-compatible herb .................................. 977 DAVID H. DUNCAN, ADRIENNE B. NICOTRA, JEFF T. WOOD, SAUL A. CUNNINGHAM Ribosomal RNA gene sequence diversity in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomeromycota) ................ 986 ALIA RODRIGUEZ, JUSTIN PETER CLAPP, JOHN CHARLES DODD Resistance variation within and among host populations in a plantpathogen metapopulation: implications for regional pathogen dynamics ........................................................................................... 990 ANNA-LIISA LAINE Nutrient limitation of plant growth and forage quality in Arctic coastal marshes ................................... 1001 JACQUELINE T. NGAI, ROBERT L. JEFFERIES Regulation of anti-herbivore defence by Fucus vesiculosus in response to various cues .................... 1011 SVEN ROHDE, MARKUS MOLIS, MARTIN WAHL Herbivory influences tree lines ............................................................................................................... 1019 DAVID M. CAIRNS, JON MOEN Consequences of low mobility in spatially and temporally heterogeneous ecosystems ....................... 1025 GLENN R. MATLACK, JOHN MONDE Rates, pathways and drivers for peatland development in the Hudson Bay Lowlands, northern Ontario, Canada ..................................................................................................................................... 1036

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PAUL H. GLASER, BARBARA C. S. HANSEN, DONALD I. SIEGEL, ANDREW S. REEVE, PAUL J. MORIN Tectonic drivers for vegetation patterning and landscape evolution in the Albany River region of the Hudson Bay Lowlands ..................................................................................................................... 1054 PAUL H. GLASER, DONALD I. SIEGEL, ANDREW S. REEVE, JAN A. JANSSENS, DAVID R. JANECKY Pinguicula L. ........................................................................................................................................... 1071 YOLANDE HESLOP-HARRISON JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY: Vol. 40, No. 3, June 2004. HOST PARASITE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN FRESHWATER PHYTOPLANKTON AND CHYTRID FUNGI (CHYTRIDIOMYCOTA) .............................................................................................. 437 Bas W. Ibelings, Arnout De Bruin, Maiko Kagami, Machteld Rijkeboer, Michaela Brehm, Ellen Van Donk REDUCED GENETIC DIVERSITY AND INCREASED POPULATION DIFFERENTIATION IN PERIPHERAL AND OVERHARVESTED POPULATIONS OF GIGARTINA SKOTTSBERGII (RHODOPHYTA, GIGARTINALES) IN SOUTHERN CHILE.................................................................... 454 Sylvain Faugeron, Enrique A. Martínez, Juan A. Correa, Leyla Cardenas, Christophe Destombe, Myriam Valero ASSESSMENT OF TEMPERATURE AND NUTRIENT LIMITATION ON SEASONAL DYNAMICS AMONG SPECIES OF SARGASSUM FROM A CORAL REEF IN SOUTHERN TAIWAN ..................... 463 Ray-Lien Hwang, Chuan-Chuan Tsai, Tse-Min Lee ALLELOCHEMICALS OF BOTRYOCOCCUS BRAUNII (CHLOROPHYCEAE) .................................... 474 In-Ze Chiang, Wen-Ya Huang, Jiunn-Tzong Wu USING EPILITHIC ALGAL COMMUNITIES TO ASSESS TROPHIC STATUS IN IRISH LAKES........... 481 Dean M. DeNicola, Elvira de Eyto, Alice Wemaere, Kenneth Irvine PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PHOTOSYNTHETIC RESPONSES OF SYNECHOCYSTIS AQUATILIS F. AQUATILIS (CYANOPHYCEAE) TO ELEVATED LEVELS OF ZINC ................................................. 496 Cristiana C. P. de Magalhães, Daniel Cardoso, Cesar P. dos Santos, Ricardo M. Chaloub INFLUENCE OF LOW LIGHT AND A LIGHT: DARK CYCLE ON NO3 UPTAKE, INTRACELLULAR NO3 , AND NITROGEN ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION BY MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON .................................................................................................................................. 505 Joseph A. Needoba, Paul J. Harrison THE MECHANISM OF ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION DURING ALGAL NITRATE ASSIMILATION AS ILLUMINATED BY THE 15N/14N OF INTRACELLULAR NITRATE.................................................. 517 Joseph A. Needoba, Daniel M. Sigman, Paul J. Harrison RELATIONSHIP OF GROWTH AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS WITH COLONY SIZE IN AN EDIBLE CYANOBACTERIUM, GE-XIAN-MI NOSTOC (CYANOPHYCEAE) ....................................................... 523 Kunshan Gao, Hongxia Ai EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION ON GROWTH AND PHLOROTANNINS IN FUCUS GARDNERI (PHAEOPHYCEAE) JUVENILES AND EMBRYOS ................................................................................. 527 Brianne E. Henry, Kathryn L. Van Alstyne KINETICS OF NITRATE, AMMONIUM, AND UREA UPTAKE BY FOUR INTERTIDAL SEAWEEDS FROM NEW ZEALAND....................................................................................................... 534 Julia C. Phillips, Catriona L. Hurd MOLECULAR DIVERGENCE AND CHARACTERIZATION OF TWO CHLOROPLAST DIVISION GENES, FTSZ1 AND FTSZ2, IN THE UNICELLULAR GREEN ALGA NANNOCHLORIS BACILLARIS (CHLOROPHYTA) ............................................................................................................. 546 Tomojirou Koide, Tomokazu Yamazaki, Maki Yamamoto, Mariko Fujishita, Hideo Nomura, Yohsuke Moriyama, Nobuko Sumiya, Sachihiro Matsunaga, Wataru Sakamoto, Shigeyuki Kawano INDUCTION OF PHOTORESPIRATION BY LIGHT IN THE CENTRIC DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA WEISSFLOGII (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE): MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION AND PHYSIOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES ..................................................................................................... 557 Micaela Schnitzler Parker, E. Virginia Armbrust, Jonah Piovia-Scott, Richard G. Keil A GLYCOPROTEIN NONCOVALENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH CELL-WALL POLYSACCHARIDE OF THE RED MICROALGA PORPHYRIDIUM SP. (RHODOPHYTA) .................................................... 568 Roshan Prakash Shrestha, Yacob Weinstein, Dudy Bar-Zvi, Shoshana (Malis) Arad

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BIOGEOGRAPHY AND TAXONOMY OF BATRACHOSPERMUM HELMINTHOSUM (BATRACHOSPERMALES, RHODOPHYTA) IN JAPAN INFERRED FROM RBCL GENE SEQUENCES............................................................................................................................................ 581 Takeaki Hanyuda, Yuzuru Suzawa, Tamie Suzawa, Shogo Arai, Hiroshi Sato, Kunihiko Ueda, Shigeru Kumano CULTIVATION OF ARTHROSPIRA (SPIRULINA) PLATENSIS (CYANOPHYCEAE) BY FED-BATCH ADDITION OF AMMONIUM CHLORIDE AT EXPONENTIALLY INCREASING FEEDING RATES ...................................................................................................................................................... 589 João Carlos M. Carvalho, Fernando R. Francisco, Kleber A. Almeida, Sunao Sato, Attilio Converti FLUORESCENCE IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION USING rRNA-TARGETED PROBES FOR SIMPLE AND RAPID IDENTIFICATION OF THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATES ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE AND ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA................................................................................. 598 Yoshihiko Sako, Shoko Hosoi-Tanabe, Aritsune Uchida 606 CRYOPRESERVATION OF THE GAMETOPHYTIC CELLS OF LAMINARIALES (PHAEOPHYTA) IN LIQUID NITROGEN Kazuyoshi Kuwano, Shigeki Kono, Young-Hyun Jo, Jong-Ahm Shin, Naotsune Saga HIGH-RESOLUTION MAGIC ANGLE SPINNING NMR ANALYSIS OF WHOLE CELLS OF CHAETOCEROS MUELLERI (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) AND COMPARISON WITH 13C-NMR AND DISTORTIONLESS ENHANCEMENT BY POLARIZATION TRANSFER 13C-NMR ANALYSIS OF LIPOPHILIC EXTRACTS ................................................................................................. 611 Matilde S. Chauton, Trond R. Størseth, Jostein Krane 2004 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE PHYCOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 7-12 AUGUST 2004 WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA ........................................................................................................... 620 2005 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE PHYCOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA AND 8TH INTERNATIONAL PHYCOLOGICAL CONGRESS 13-19 AUGUST 2005, DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA..................................................................................................................................................... 620 JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 34, No. 10, October 2004. Tropical Instability Wave Variability in the Pacific and Its Relation to Large-Scale Currents. Eric S. Johnson and Jeffrey A. Proehl.................................................................................................... 2121–2147. Synoptic-Scale Air–Sea Flux Forcing in the Western North Pacific: Observations and Their Impact on SST and the Mixed Layer. Bo Qiu, Shuiming Chen and Peter Hacker ................................. 2148–2159. Antarctic Intermediate Water Circulation and Variability in a Coupled Climate Model. Agus Santoso and Matthew H. England .............................................................................................. 2160–2179. A Spectral Technique for Estimating Turbulent Stress, Scalar Flux Magnitude, and Eddy Viscosity in the Ocean Boundary Layer under Pack Ice. Miles G. McPhee .............................................. 2180–2188. Convectively Driven Mixing in the Bottom Boundary Layer. J. N. Moum, A. Perlin, J. M. Klymak, M. D. Levine, T. Boyd and P. M. Kosro ........................................................................................... 2189–2202. Roles of Mesoscale Eddies in the Kuroshio Paths. Yasumasa Miyazawa, Xinyu Guo and Toshio Yamagata.................................................................................................................................... 2203–2222. Loop Current Eddy Interaction with the Western Boundary in the Gulf of Mexico. S. A. Frolov, G. G. Sutyrin, G. D. Rowe and L. M. Rothstein ............................................................................... 2223–2237. Transformation of the Warm Waters of the North Atlantic from a Geostrophic Streamfunction Perspective. Paula Pérez-Brunius, Tom Rossby and D. Randolph Watts ................................. 2238–2256. Baroclinically Unstable Geostrophic Turbulence in the Limits of Strong and Weak Bottom Ekman Friction: Application to Midocean Eddies. Brian K. Arbic and Glenn R. Flierl ............................ 2257–2273. A Quasigeostrophic Analysis of a Meander in the Palamós Canyon: Vertical Velocity, Geopotential Tendency, and a Relocation Technique. Ananda Pascual, Damià Gomis, Robert L. Haney and Simón Ruiz.................................................................................................................................. 2274–2287. Energy Dissipation of Unsteady Wave Breaking on Currents. Aifeng Yao and Chin H. Wu...... 2288–2304. The Sensitivity and Stability of the Ocean's Thermohaline Circulation to Finite-Amplitude Perturbations. Mu Mu, Liang Sun and Henk A. Dijkstra ............................................................. 2305–2315. Field Measurements of Duration-Limited Growth of Wind-Generated Ocean Surface Waves at Young Stage of Development*. Paul A. Hwang and David W. Wang ........................................ 2316–2326. Oyashio Southward Intrusion and Cross-Gyre Transport Related to Diapycnal Upwelling in the Okhotsk Sea. Hiroaki Tatebe and Ichiro Yasuda........................................................................ 2327–2341.

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JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 34, No. 11, November 2004. Wind Profile and Drag Coefficient over Mature Ocean Surface Wave Spectra. Tetsu Hara and Stephen E. Belcher ..................................................................................................................... 2345–2358. Effects of Noise on Thorpe Scales and Run Lengths. Helen L. Johnson and Chris Garrett ...... 2359–2372. Coastline Direction, Interannual Flow, and the Strong El Niño Currents along Australia's Nearly Zonal Southern Coast. Jianke Li and Allan J. Clarke ................................................................. 2373–2381. Interannual to Interdecadal Variability in the Japan Sea Based on a New Gridded Upper Water Temperature Dataset. Shoshiro Minobe, Akinori Sako and Makoto Nakamura......................... 2382–2397. Formation of the South Pacific Shallow Salinity Minimum: A Southern Ocean Pathway to the Tropical Pacific. Johannes Karstensen....................................................................................... 2398–2412. Dynamics of Willapa Bay, Washington: A Highly Unsteady, Partially Mixed Estuary. N. S. Banas, B. M. Hickey, P. MacCready and J. A. Newton .......................................................................... 2413–2427. The Effects of Mesoscale Eddies on the Main Subtropical Thermocline. Cara C. Henning and Geoffrey K. Vallis ........................................................................................................................ 2428–2443. The Importance of Nonlinear Cross-Shelf Momentum Flux during Wind-Driven Coastal Upwelling*. Steven J. Lentz and David C. Chapman..................................................................................... 2444–2457. The Response of Buoyant Coastal Plumes to Upwelling-Favorable Winds*. Steven Lentz ...... 2458–2469. Sea-Ice Drift on the Northeastern Shelf of Sakhalin Island. Georgy V. Shevchenko, Alexander B. Rabinovich and Richard E. Thomson ......................................................................................... 2470–2491. Nonuniform Upwelling in a Shallow-Water Model of the Antarctic Bottom Water in the Brazil Basin*. Olivier Marchal and Jonas Nycander ............................................................................. 2492–2513. Interdecadal Sea Level Fluctuations at Hawaii. Yvonne L. Firing, Mark A. Merrifield, Thomas A. Schroeder and Bo Qiu ................................................................................................................ 2514–2524. Ocean Response and Feedback to the SST Dipole in the Tropical Atlantic*. Terrence M. Joyce, Claude Frankignoul, Jiayan Yang and Helen E. Phillips ............................................................ 2525–2540. Anisotropic Gent–McWilliams Parameterization for Ocean Models. Richard D. Smith and Peter R. Gent ............................................................................................................................................ 2541–2564. JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH: Vol. 26, No. 12, December 2004. How to assess toxin ingestion and post-ingestion partitioning in zooplankton? .......................1369-1377(9) Gary S. Caldwell; Susan B. Watson; Matthew G. Bentley Diapause in the calanoid freshwater copepod Eudiaptomus graciloides ..............................1379-1388(10) Martina Zeller; Raquel Jiménez-Melero; Barbara Santer Complete larval and early juvenile development of the mangrove crab Perisesarma fasciatum (Crustacea: Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from Singapore, with a larval comparison of Parasesarma and Perisesarma .....................................................................................................................1389-1408(20) Guillermo Guerao; Klaus Anger; U. W. E. Nettelmann; Christoph D. Schubart Zooplankton in the Ligurian Sea: Part I. Characterization of their dispersion, relative abundance and environment during summer 1999 ...................................................................................1409-1418(10) Duncan E. McGehee; David A. Demer; Joseph D. Warren Zooplankton in the Ligurian Sea: Part II. Exploration of their physical and biological forcing functions during summer 2000 ..................................................................................................1419-1427(9) Joseph D. Warren; David A. Demer; Duncan E. McGehee; Rossella Di Mento; J. Fabrizio Borsani Seasonal variations of bacterial abundance and biomass and their relation to phytoplankton in the hypertrophic tropical lagoon Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, Colombia .............................1429-1439(11) Klaus Gocke; Carlos Hernández; Hanna Giesenhagen; Hans-Georg Hoppe Spatial heterogeneity of zooplankton biomass and size structure in southern Québec lakes: variation among lakes and within lake among epi-, meta- and hypolimnion strata ................1441-1458(18) Stéphane Masson; Bernadette Pinel-Alloul; Pierre Dutilleul Effects of growth medium, temperature, salinity and seawater source on the growth of Gymnodinium catenatum (Dinophyceae) from Bahía Concepción, Gulf of California, Mexico 1459-1470(12) C. J. Band-Schmidt; L. Morquecho; C. H. Lechuga-Devéze; D. M. Anderson Picocyanobacterial photosynthetic efficiency under Daphnia grazing pressure ......................1471-1477(7) Cristiana Callieri; Esteban Balseiro; Roberto Bertoni; Beatriz Modenutti Summer coastal zooplankton biomass and copepod community structure near the Italian Terra Nova Base (Terra Nova Bay, Ross Sea, Antarctica) ..............................................................1479-1488(10)

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Luigi Pane; Mirvana Feletti; Barbara Francomacaro; Gian Luigi Mariottini Diel and vertical variability of seston food quality and quantity in a small subalpine oligomesotrophic lake .............................................................................................................1489-1498(10) Sangkyu Park; Sudeep Chandra; Dörthe C. Müller-Navarra; Charles R. Goldman The volume of water filtered by a Continuous Plankton Recorder sample: the effect of ship speed 1499-1506(8) T. D. Jonas; A. Walne; G. Beaugrand; L. Gregory; G. C. Hays Potential toxicity of chrysophytes affiliated with Poterioochromonas and related ‘Spumella-like’ flagellates ..................................................................................................................................1507-1514(8) Jens Boenigk; Peter Stadler Distribution of plankton related to the mesoscale physical structure within the surface mixed layer in the southwestern East Sea, Korea .....................................................................................1515-1528(14) Jung-Hoon Kang; Woong-Seo Kim; Kyung-Il Chang; Jae-Hoon Noh Bioluminescence response of four species of dinoflagellates to fully developed pipe flow ...1529-1546(18) Michael I. Latz; Jennifer C. Nauen; Jim Rohr In situ egg production rate of the planktonic copepod Acartia steueri in Ilkwang Bay, southeastern coast of Korea ...........................................................................................................................1547-1553(7) Yeongha Jung; Hyung-Ku Kang; Yong Joo Kang First record of paralarvae of Scaeurgus unicirrhus (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) ..................1555-1558(4) Author: Giambattista Bello Variability and predictability of the empirical conversion factor for converting 3H-thymidine uptake into bacterial carbon production for a eutrophic lake ................................................................1559-1566(8) Alexander K. T. Kirschner; Peter Wihlidal; Branko Velimirov LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 49, No. 6, November 2004. Jonsson, Per R., Mona Johansson, and Richard W. Pierce Attachment to suspended particles may improve foraging and reduce predation risk for tintinnid ciliates ...........................................................................................................................................1907-1914 Jakobsen, Hans H., and Suzanne L. Strom Circadian cycles in growth and feeding rates of heterotrophic protist plankton ...........................1915-1922 Smith, Jennifer E., Celia M. Smith, Peter S. Vroom, Kevin L. Beach, and Steven Miller Nutrient and growth dynamics of Halimeda tuna on Conch Reef, Florida Keys: Possible influence of internal tides on nutrient status and physiology........................................................................ 1923-1936 Fuchs, Heidi L., Lauren S. Mullineaux, and Andrew R. Solow Sinking behavior of gastropod larvae (Ilyanassa obsoleta) in turbulence ....................................1937-1948 Metaxas, Anna Spatial and temporal patterns in larval supply at hydrothermal vents on the northeast Pacific Ocean ............................................................................................................................................1949-1956 Lesser, Michael P., Miles D. Lamare, and Michael F. Barker Transmission of ultraviolet radiation through the Antarctic annual sea ice and its biological effects on sea urchin embryos ..................................................................................................................1957-1963 Paris, Claire B., and Robert K. Cowen Direct evidence of a biophysical retention mechanism for coral reef fish larvae 1964-1979 Pan, Jin-Fen, and Wen-Xiong Wang Differential uptake of dissolved and particulate organic carbon by the marine mussel Perna viridis 1980-1991 Larned, Scott T., Vladimir I. Nikora, and Barry J. F. Biggs Mass-transfer-limited nitrogen and phosphorus uptake by stream periphyton: A conceptual model and experimental evidence ...........................................................................................................1992-2000 Logue, Jürg Brendan, Christopher T. Robinson, Christoph Meier, and Jan Roelof Van der Meer Relationship between sediment organic matter, bacteria composition, and the ecosystem metabolism of alpine streams .......................................................................................................2001-2010 Pullin, Michael J., Stefan Bertilsson, Jared V. Goldstone, and Bettina M. Voelker Effects of sunlight and hydroxyl radical on dissolved organic matter: Bacterial growth efficiency and production of carboxylic acids and other substrates ..............................................................2011-2022 Meckler, A. N., C. J. Schubert, G. L. Cowie, S. Peiffer, and M. Dittrich New organic matter degradation proxies: Valid in lake systems? .................................................2023-2033 Cammack, W. K. Levi, Jacob Kalff, Yves T. Prairie, and Erik M. Smith Fluorescent dissolved organic matter in lakes: Relationships with heterotrophic metabolism .....2034-2045

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Thomsen, Uffe, Bo Thamdrup, David A. Stahl, and Donald E. Canfield Pathways of organic carbon oxidation in a deep lacustrine sediment, Lake Michigan .................2046-2057 Furukawa, Yoko, April C. Smith, Joel E. Kostka, Janet Watkins, and Clark R. Alexander Quantification of macrobenthic effects on diagenesis using a multicomponent inverse model in salt marsh sediments ...........................................................................................................................2058-2072 Glud, Ronnie N., and Mathias Middelboe Virus and bacteria dynamics of a coastal sediment: Implication for benthic carbon cycling ........2073-2081 Ferdie, Meredith, and James W. Fourqurean Responses of seagrass communities to fertilization along a gradient of relative availability of nitrogen and phosphorus in a carbonate environment .................................................................2082-2094 Blain, Stéphane, Cécile Guieu, Hervé Claustre, Karine Leblanc, Thierry Moutin, Bernard Quéguiner, Joséphine Ras, and Géraldine Sarthou Availability of iron and major nutrients for phytoplankton in the north-east Atlantic Ocean .........2095-2104 Leonardos, Nikos, and Richard J. Geider Responses of elemental and biochemical composition of Chaetoceros muelleri to growth under varying light and nitrate:phosphate supply ratios and their influence on critical N : P .................2105-2114 Twining, Benjamin S., Stephen B. Baines, and Nicholas S. Fisher Element stoichiometries of individual plankton cells collected during the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX)..................................................................................................................... 2115-2128 Oliver, Jacques L., Richard T. Barber, Walker O. Smith, Jr., and Hugh W. Ducklow The heterotrophic bacterial response during the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) .....2129-2140 Timmermans, Klaas R., Bas van der Wagt, and Hein J. W. de Baar Growth rates, half saturation constants, and silicate, nitrate, and phosphate depletion in relation to iron availability of four large open-ocean diatoms from the Southern Ocean ...............................2141-2151 Arnold, Katharine H., Rachael S. Shreeve, Angus Atkinson, and Andrew Clarke Growth rates of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba: Comparison of the instantaneous growth rate method with nitrogen and phosphorus stoichiometry ...................................................................2152-2161 Duarte, Carlos M., Susana Agustí, and Dolors Vaqué Controls on planktonic metabolism in the Bay of Blanes, north-western Mediterranean littoral ..2162-2170 Chan, Francis, Michael L. Pace, Robert W. Howarth, and Roxanne M. Marino Bloom formation in heterocystic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria: The dependence on colony size and zooplankton grazing ...............................................................................................................2171-2178 Kutser, Tiit Quantitative detection of chlorophyll in cyanobacterial blooms by satellite remote sensing ........2179-2189 Rao, Yerubandi R., Michael G. Skafel, and Murray N. Charlton Circulation and turbulent exchange characteristics during the thermal bar in Lake Ontario ........2190-2200 Anthony, Kenneth R. N., Peter V. Ridd, Alan R. Orpin, Piers Larcombe, and Janice Lough Temporal variation in light availability in coastal benthic habitats: Effects of clouds, turbidity, and tides ...............................................................................................................................................2201-2211 Grossart, Hans-Peter, Thorsten Brinkhoff, Torben Martens, Claus Duerselen, Gerd Liebezeit, and Meinhard Simon Tidal dynamics of dissolved and particulate matter and bacteria in a tidal flat ecosystem in spring and fall ...........................................................................................................................................2212-2222 Sutula, Martha, Thomas S. Bianchi, and Brent A. McKee Effect of seasonal sediment storage in the lower Mississippi River on the flux of reactive particulate phosphorus to the Gulf of Mexico ...............................................................................2223-2235 Blomqvist, Sven, Anneli Gunnars, and Ragnar Elmgren Why the limiting nutrient differs between temperate coastal seas and freshwater lakes: A matter of salt .................................................................................................................................................2236-2241 Sansone, Francis J., Andrew W. Graham, and William M. Berelson Methane along the western Mexican margin ................................................................................2242-2255 Rippey, Brian, Cathrine L. Rose, and Richard W. Douglas A model for lead, zinc, and copper in lakes ..................................................................................2256-2264 Poulain, A. J., M. Amyot, D. Findlay, S. Telor, T. Barkay, and H. Hintelmann Biological and photochemical production of dissolved gaseous mercury in a boreal lake ...........2265-2275 Zhang, Jinzhong, Feiyue Wang, James D. House, and Bryan Page Thiols in wetland interstitial waters and their role in mercury and methylmercury speciation ...... 2276-2286 Notes

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Shikano, Shuichi, Eisuke Kikuchi, Shigeto Takagi, and Hideyuki Doi Volcanic heat flux and short-term holomixis during the summer stratification period in a crater lake ................................................................................................................................................2287-2292 Bärlocher, Felix, and Heinz Brendelberger Clearance of aquatic hyphomycete spores by a benthic suspension feeder ...............................2292-2296 Ianson, Debby, George A. Jackson, Martin V. Angel, Richard S. Lampitt, and Adrian B. Burd Effect of net avoidance on estimates of diel vertical migration .....................................................2297-2303 Lomas, Michael W., Ashley Swain, Ryan Shelton, and James W. Ammerman Taxonomic variability of phosphorus stress in Sargasso Sea phytoplankton ...............................2303-2309 Bradbury, Ian R., Steven E. Campana, Paul Bentzen, and Paul V. R. Snelgrove Synchronized hatch and its ecological significance in rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax in St. Mary’s Bay, Newfoundland .......................................................................................................................2310-2315 Errata Laws, E. A., and T. T. Bannister Erratum: Nutrient- and light-limited growth of Thalassiosira fluviatilis in continuous culture with implications for phytoplankton growth in the ocean ............................................................................... 2316 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 281, 2004. Marchetti A, Trainer VL, Harrison PJ Environmental conditions and phytoplankton dynamics associated with Pseudo-nitzschia abundance and domoic acid in the Juan de Fuca eddy .......................................................................... 1-12 Barlow RG, Aiken J, Moore GF, Holligan PM, Lavender S Pigment adaptations in surface phytoplankton along the eastern boundary of the Atlantic Ocean ...... 13-26 Elmetri I, Bell PRF Effects of phosphorus on the growth and nitrogen fixation rates of Lyngbya majuscula: implications for management in Moreton Bay, Queensland .................................................................. 27-35 Roleda MY, van de Poll WH, Hanelt D, Wiencke C PAR and UVBR effects on photosynthesis, viability, growth and DNA in different life stages of coexisting Gigartinales: implications for recruitment and zonation pattern ........................................... 37-50 Coyer JA, Diekmann OE, Serrão EA, Procaccini G, Milchakova N, Pearson GA, Stam WT, Olsen JL Population genetics of dwarf eelgrass Zostera noltii throughout its biogeographic range .................... 51-62 Jones RJ, Bowyer J, Hoegh-Guldberg O, Blackall LL Dynamics of a temperature-related coral disease outbreak .................................................................. 63-77 Gallucci F, Netto SA Effects of the passage of cold fronts over a coastal site: an ecosystem approach ............................... 79-92 Cerrato RM, Caron DA, Lonsdale DJ, Rose JM, Schaffner RA Effect of the northern quahog Mercenaria mercenaria on the development of blooms of the brown tide alga Aureococcus anophagefferens ............................................................................................. 93-108 Hudson IR, Pond DW, Billett DSM, Tyler PA, Lampitt RS, Wolff GA Temporal variations in fatty acid composition of deep-sea holothurians: evidence of bentho-pelagic coupling ................................................................................................................................. 109-120 Bulleri F, Chapman MG, Underwood AJ Patterns of movement of the limpet Cellana tramoserica on rocky shores and retaining seawalls .. 121-129 Schmidt K, Tarling GA, Plathner N, Atkinson A Moult cycle-related changes in feeding rates of larval krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica and Thysanoessa spp. .............................................................................................................................. 131-143 Roast SD, Widdows J, Pope N, Jones MB Sediment-biota interactions: mysid feeding activity enhances water turbidity and sediment erodability........................................................................................................................................... 145-154 Viitasalo S, Viitasalo M Predation by the mysid shrimps Mysis mixta and M. relicta on benthic eggs of Bosmina longispina maritima (Cladocera) in the northern Baltic Sea................................................................................ 155-163 Papaspyrou S, Thessalou-Legaki M, Kristensen E Impact of Pestarella tyrrhena on benthic metabolism in sediment microcosms enriched with seagrass and macroalgal detritus ...................................................................................................... 165-179 Moksnes PO

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Interference competition for space in nursery habitats: density-dependent effects on growth and dispersal in juvenile shore crabs Carcinus maenas........................................................................... 181-191 Karaiskou N, Triantafyllidis A, Triantaphyllidis C Shallow genetic structure of 3 species of the genus Trachurus in European waters ........................ 193-205 Miller AK, Sydeman WJ Rockfish response to low-frequency ocean climate change as revealed by the diet of a marine bird over multiple time scales.................................................................................................................... 207-216 Jung S, Houde ED Production of bay anchovy Anchoa mitchilli in Chesapeake Bay: application of size-based theory .217-232 Harris LA, Buckley B, Nixon SW, Allen BT Experimental studies of predation by bluefish Pomatomus saltatrix in varying densities of seagrass and macroalgae ................................................................................................................................. 233-239 Galbraith PS, Browman HI, Racca RG, Skiftesvik AB, Saint-Pierre JF Effect of turbulence on the energetics of foraging in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua larvae.................. 241-257 Peck DR, Smithers BV, Krockenberger AK, Congdon BC Sea surface temperature constrains wedge-tailed shearwater foraging success within breeding seasons.............................................................................................................................................. 259-266 Zhao L, Schell DM Stable isotope ratios in harbor seal Phoca vitulina vibrissae: effects of growth patterns on ecological records .............................................................................................................................. 267-273 Mitani Y, Watanabe Y, Sato K, Cameron MF, Naito Y 3D diving behavior of Weddell seals with respect to prey accessibility and abundance................... 275-281 Das K, Siebert U, Fontaine M, Jauniaux T, Holsbeek L, Bouquegneau JM Ecological and pathological factors related to trace metal concentrations in harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena from the North Sea and adjacent areas........................................................... 283-295 COMMENT Thiemann GW, Budge SM, Bowen WD, Iverson SJ Comment on Grahl-Nielsen et al. (2003) 'Fatty acid composition of the adipose tissue of polar bears and of their prey: ringed seals, bearded seals and harp seals' ............................................... 297-301 REPLY COMMENT Grahl-Nielsen O, Andersen M, Derocher AE, Lydersen C, Wiig Ø, Kovacs KM Reply to Comment on Grahl-Nielsen et al. (2003): sampling, data treatment and predictions in investigations on fatty acids in marine mammals .............................................................................. 303-306 Erratum Behrens et al., Vol. 279:129-139 (2004)................................................................................................... 307 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 282, 2004. RESEARCH ARTICLES Thornton DCO Formation of transparent exopolymeric particles (TEP) from macroalgal detritus .................................. 1-12 Kröncke I, Stoeck T, Wieking G, Palojärvi A Relationship between structural and functional aspects of microbial and macrofaunal communities in different areas of the North Sea......................................................................................................... 13-31 Herlory O, Guarini JM, Richard P, Blanchard GF Microstructure of microphytobenthic biofilm and its spatio-temporal dynamics in an intertidal mudflat (Aiguillon Bay, France).............................................................................................................. 33-44 Cerco CF, Noel MR Process-based primary production modeling in Chesapeake Bay........................................................ 45-58 Stabenau ER, Zepp RG, Bartels E, Zika RG Role of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum as a source of chromophoric dissolved organic matter in coastal south Florida .......................................................................................................................... 59-72 Martí R, Uriz MJ, Turon X Seasonal and spatial variation of species toxicity in Mediterranean seaweed communities: correlation to biotic and abiotic factors .................................................................................................. 73-85 Hughes AR, Bando KJ, Rodriguez LF, Williams SL Relative effects of grazers and nutrients on seagrasses: a meta-analysis approach ........................... 87-99 Bricelj VM, MacQuarrie SP, Smolowitz R

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Concentration-dependent effects of toxic and non-toxic isolates of the brown tide alga Aureococcus anophagefferens on growth of juvenile bivalves.......................................................... 101-114 Roberson LM, Coyer JA Variation in blade morphology of the kelp Eisenia arborea: incipient speciation due to local water motion? .............................................................................................................................................. 115-128 Ohtsuka S, Hora M, Suzaki T, Arikawa M, Omura G, Yamada K Morphology and host-specificity of the apostome ciliate Vampyrophrya pelagica infecting pelagic copepods in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan ........................................................................................... 129-142 Buckley BA, Szmant AM RNA/dnA ratios as indicators of metabolic activity in four species of Caribbean reef-building corals143-149 Houlbrèque F, Tambutté E, Richard C, Ferrier-Pagès C Importance of a micro-diet for scleractinian corals ............................................................................ 151-160 Lapid ED, Wielgus J, Chadwick-Furman NE Sweeper tentacles of the brain coral Platygyra daedalea: induced development and effects on competitors......................................................................................................................................... 161-171 Tomas F, Romero J, Turon X Settlement and recruitment of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus in two contrasting habitats in the Mediterranean.............................................................................................................................. 173-184 Smith J, Shackley SE Effects of a commercial mussel Mytilus edulis lay on a sublittoral, soft sediment benthic community.......................................................................................................................................... 185-191 Rilov G, Benayahu Y, Gasith A Life on the edge: do biomechanical and behavioral adaptations to wave-exposure correlate with habitat partitioning in predatory whelks? ........................................................................................... 193-204 Giles H, Pilditch CA Effects of diet on sinking rates and erosion thresholds of mussel Perna canaliculus biodeposits.... 205-219 Robbins BD, Bell SS Relationships between a hermit crab and its shell resource: spatial patterns within a seagrass-dominated landscape......................................................................................................................... 221-227 O'Connor NJ, Judge ML Molting of fiddler crab Uca minax megalopae: stimulatory cues are specific to salt marshes .......... 229-236 Hernandez-Llamas A, Ratkowsky DA Growth of fishes, crustaceans and molluscs: -estimation of the von Bertalanffy, Logistic, Gompertz and Richards curves and a new growth model.................................................................................. 237-244 Arrizabalaga H, Costas E, Juste J, González-Garcés A, Nieto B, López-Rodas V Population structure of albacore Thunnus alalunga inferred from blood groups and tag-recapture analyses ............................................................................................................................................. 245-252 Takahashi M, Watanabe Y Developmental and growth rates of Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus during metamorphosis in the Kuroshio-Oyashio transitional waters ...................................................................................... 253-260 Edeline E, Dufour S, Briand C, Fatin D, Elie P Thyroid status is related to migratory behavior in Anguilla anguilla glass eels ................................. 261-270 Richardson DE, Cowen RK Diversity of leptocephalus larvae around the island of Barbados (West Indies): relevance to regional distributions .......................................................................................................................... 271-284 Hückstädt LA, Krautz MC Interaction between southern sea lions Otaria flavescens and jack mackerel Trachurus symmetricus commercial fishery off Central Chile: a geostatistical approach................................... 285-294 Reeves RR, Josephson E, Smith TD Putative historical occurrence of North Atlantic right whales in mid-latitude offshore waters: 'Maury's Smear' is likely apocryphal .................................................................................................. 295-305 AS I SEE IT Ruiz JM Oil spills versus shifting baselines ..................................................................................................... 307-309 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 283, 2004. Caron G, Michel C, Gosselin M

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Seasonal contributions of phytoplankton and fecal pellets to the organic carbon sinking flux in the North Water (northern Baffin Bay) ........................................................................................................... 1-13 Höglander H, Larsson U, Hajdu S Vertical distribution and settling of spring phytoplankton in the offshore NW Baltic Sea proper........... 15-27 Fujiki T, Toda T, Kikuchi T, Aono H, Taguchi S Phosphorus limitation of primary productivity during the spring-summer blooms in Sagami Bay, Japan ..................................................................................................................................................... 29-38 Nieto-Cid M, Álvarez-Salgado XA, Brea S, Pérez FF Cycling of dissolved and particulate carbohydrates in a coastal upwelling system (NW Iberian Peninsula) .............................................................................................................................................. 39-54 Visser AW, Jackson GA Characteristics of the chemical plume behind a sinking particle in a turbulent water column............... 55-71 Johnson ZI Description and application of the background irradiance gradient-single turnover fluorometer (BIG-STf)................................................................................................................................................ 73-80 Teo SLH, Boustany A, Blackwell S, Walli A, Weng KC, Block BA Validation of geolocation estimates based on light level and sea surface temperature from electronic tags........................................................................................................................................ 81-98 Ibarra-Obando SE, Smith SV, Poumian-Tapia M, Camacho-Ibar V, Carriquiry JD, Montes-Hugo M Benthic metabolism in San Quintin Bay, Baja California, Mexico........................................................ 99-112 Weidner K, Lages BG, da Gama BAP, Molis M, Wahl M, Pereira RC Effect of mesograzers and nutrient levels on induction of defenses in several Brazilian macroalgae113-125 Bowles JW, Bell SS Simulated herbivory and the dynamics of disease in Thalassia testudinum ..................................... 127-132 Leys SP, Wilson K, Holeton C, Reiswig HM, Austin WC, Tunnicliffe V Patterns of glass sponge (Porifera, Hexactinellida) distribution in coastal waters of British Columbia, Canada ............................................................................................................................. 133-149 Robbart ML, Peckol P, Scordilis SP, Curran HA, Brown-Saracino J Population recovery and differential heat shock protein expression for the corals Agaricia agaricites and A. tenuifolia in Belize .................................................................................................. 151-160 Andréfouët S, Payri C, Hochberg EJ, Hu C, Atkinson MJ, Muller-Karger FE Use of in situ and airborne reflectance for scaling-up spectral discrimination of coral reef macroalgae from species to communities ......................................................................................... 161-177 Raymond JF, Himmelman JH, Guderley HE Sex differences in biochemical composition, energy content and allocation to reproductive effort in the brooding sea star Leptasterias polaris......................................................................................... 179-190 McCarthy DA, Young CM Effects of water-borne gametes on the aggregation behavior of Lytechinus variegatus................... 191-198 Seuront L, Hwang JS, Tseng LC, Schmitt FG, Souissi S, Wong CK Individual variability in the swimming behavior of the sub-tropical copepod Oncaea venusta (Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida)......................................................................................................... 199-217 Takahashi K, Kawaguchi K Reproductive biology of the intertidal and infralittoral mysids Archaeomysis kokuboi and A. japonica on a sandy beach in NE Japan ........................................................................................... 219-231 Pittman SJ, McAlpine CA, Pittman KM Linking fish and prawns to their environment: a hierarchical landscape approach ........................... 233-254 Green J, Jones R, Brownell S Age and growth of larval cod and haddock on Georges Bank during 1995 and 1996 ...................... 255-268 Kimball ME, Miller JM, Whitfield PE, Hare JA Thermal tolerance and potential distribution of invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles complex) on the east coast of the United States.................................................................................................... 269-278 Burger AE, Hitchcock CL, Davoren GK Spatial aggregations of seabirds and their prey on the continental shelf off SW Vancouver Island .279-292 NOTE Bost CA, Charrassin JB, Clerquin Y, Ropert-Coudert Y, Le Maho Y Exploitation of distant marginal ice zones by king penguins during winter........................................ 293-297 COMMENT Hays GC, Broderick AC, Godley BJ, Luschi P, Nichols WJ

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Tracking turtles to their death ............................................................................................................ 299-300 REPLY COMMENT Chaloupka M, Parker D, Balazs G Tracking turtles to their death—reply to Hays et al............................................................................ 301-302 AS I SEE IT Giménez L Marine community ecology: importance of trait-mediated effects propagating through complex life cycles ................................................................................................................................................. 303-310 MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION: Vol. 21, No. 11, November 2004. Research Articles: C. M. Pusch, M. Broghammer, G. J. Nicholson, A. G. Nerlich, A. Zink, I. Kennerknecht, L. Bachmann, and N. Blin PCR-Induced Sequence Alterations Hamper the Typing of Prehistoric Bone Samples for Diagnostic Achondroplasia Mutations ...........................................................................................2005-2011 Eva-Liis Loogväli, Urmas Roostalu, Boris A. Malyarchuk, Miroslava V. Derenko, Toomas Kivisild, Ene Metspalu, Kristiina Tambets, Maere Reidla, Helle-Viivi Tolk, Jüri Parik, Erwan Pennarun, Sirle Laos, Arina Lunkina, Maria Golubenko, Lovorka Barac, Marijana Pericic, Oleg P. Balanovsky, Vladislava Gusar, Elsa K. Khusnutdinova, Vadim Stepanov, Valery Puzyrev, Pavao Rudan, Elena V. Balanovska, Elena Grechanina, Christelle Richard, Jean-Paul Moisan, André Chaventré, Nicholas P. Anagnou, Kalliopi I. Pappa, Emmanuel N. Michalodimitrakis, Mireille Claustres, Mukaddes Gölge, Ilia Mikerezi, Esien Usanga, and Richard Villems Disuniting Uniformity: A Pied Cladistic Canvas of mtDNA Haplogroup H in Eurasia ...................2012-2021 Jean-Nicolas Volff, Hans Lehrach, Richard Reinhardt, and Daniel Chourrout Retroelement Dynamics and a Novel Type of Chordate Retrovirus-like Element in the Miniature Genome of the Tunicate Oikopleura dioica ..................................................................................2022-2033 Shin-ichi Yokobori, Naoya Fukuda, Mitsue Nakamura, Tomoko Aoyama, and Tairo Oshima Long-Term Conservation of Six Duplicated Structural Genes in Cephalopod Mitochondrial Genomes .......................................................................................................................................2034-2046 Jason A. Wilder, Zahra Mobasher, and Michael F. Hammer Genetic Evidence for Unequal Effective Population Sizes of Human Females and Males ..........2047-2057 I. King Jordan, Leonardo Mariño-Ramírez, Yuri I. Wolf, and Eugene V. Koonin Conservation and Coevolution in the Scale-Free Human Gene Coexpression Network .............2058-2070 Shozo Yokoyama and Naomi Takenaka The Molecular Basis of Adaptive Evolution of Squirrelfish Rhodopsins .......................................2071-2078 Jerzy K Kulski, Tatsuya Anzai, Takashi Shiina, and Hidetoshi Inoko Rhesus Macaque Class I Duplicon Structures, Organization, and Evolution Within the Alpha Block of the Major Histocompatibility Complex .......................................................................................2079-2091 Alexandra M. Lopes, Francesc Calafell, and António Amorim Microsatellite Variation and Evolutionary History of PCDHX/Y Gene Pair Within the Xq21.3/Yp11.2 Hominid-Specific Homology Block ................................................................................................2092-2101 Andrew F. Hugall and Michael S. Y. Lee Molecular Claims of Gondwanan Age for Australian Agamid Lizards are Untenable ..................2102-2110 Yi Li, Ya-ping Qian, Xiao-jing Yu, Yin-qiu Wang, Ding-gui Dong, Wei Sun, Run-mei Ma, and Bing Su Recent Origin of a Hominoid-Specific Splice Form of Neuropsin, a Gene Involved in Learning and Memory .........................................................................................................................................2111-2115 Günter P. Wagner, Claudia Fried, Sonja J. Prohaska, and Peter F. Stadler Divergence of Conserved Non-Coding Sequences: Rate Estimates and Relative Rate Tests ....2116-2121 Daniel Papillon, Yvan Perez, Xavier Caubit, and Yannick Le Parco Identification of Chaetognaths as Protostomes Is Supported by the Analysis of Their Mitochondrial Genome ........................................................................................................................................2122-2129 Zhi Zhang, Tina M. Hambuch, and John Parsch Molecular Evolution of Sex-Biased Genes in Drosophila .............................................................2130-2139 Guy L. Odom, Jennifer L. Robichaux, and Prescott L. Deininger Predicting Mammalian SINE Subfamily Activity from A-tail Length ..............................................2140-2148 Yoshinobu Igarashi, Kiyoko F. Aoki, Hiroshi Mamitsuka, Kei-ichi Kuma, and Minoru Kanehisa

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The Evolutionary Repertoires of the Eukaryotic-Type ABC Transporters in Terms of the Phylogeny of ATP-binding Domains in Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes .............................................................2149-2160 Richard Bourgon, Mauro Delorenzi, Tobias Sargeant, Anthony N. Hodder, Brendan S. Crabb, and Terence P. Speed The Serine Repeat Antigen (SERA) Gene Family Phylogeny in Plasmodium: The Impact of GC Content and Reconciliation of Gene and Species Trees ..............................................................2161-2171 Laura Gómez-Valero, Amparo Latorre, and Francisco J. Silva The Evolutionary Fate of Nonfunctional DNA in the Bacterial Endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola 2172-2181 MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION: Vol. 21, No. 12, December 2004. Editorials: William Martin Editor's Report for 2003 and January to June, 2004 ....................................................................2360-2363 Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution (SMBE) Council and Business Meetings, 2004 State College, Pennsylvania, USA .........................................................................................................2364-2365 Treasurer's Report for January 1, 2003–December 31, 2004 prepared by Marta L. Wayne, Treasurer ................................................................................................................................................ 2366 MBE Reviewers: Volume 21 .........................................................................................................2367-2373 Research Articles: Stuart A. Ralph, Bernardo J. Foth, Neil Hall, and Geoffrey I. McFadden Evolutionary Pressures on Apicoplast Transit Peptides ...............................................................2183-2194 Mark M. Tanaka, Noah A. Rosenberg, and Peter M. Small The Control of Copy Number of IS6110 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis ......................................2195-2201 Ondrej Podlaha and Jianzhi Zhang Nonneutral Evolution of the Transcribed Pseudogene Makorin1-p1 in Mice ...............................2202-2209 Marko Premzl, Jill E. Gready, Lars S. Jermiin, Tatjana Simonic, and Jennifer A. Marshall Graves Evolution of Vertebrate Genes Related to Prion and Shadoo Proteins—Clues from Comparative Genomic Analysis .........................................................................................................................2210-2231 Carine Guillet-Claude, Nathalie Isabel, Betty Pelgas, and Jean Bousquet The Evolutionary Implications of knox-I Gene Duplications in Conifers: Correlated Evidence from Phylogeny, Gene Mapping, and Analysis of Functional Divergence ............................................2232-2245 Peter A. Fields and Daniel E. Houseman Decreases in Activation Energy and Substrate Affinity in Cold-Adapted A4-Lactate Dehydrogenase: Evidence from the Antarctic Notothenioid Fish Chaenocephalus aceratus ......2246-2255 Mark S. Bulmer and Ross H. Crozier Duplication and Diversifying Selection Among Termite Antifungal Peptides ................................2256-2264 Yong-Gang Yao, Qing-Peng Kong, Cheng-Ye Wang, Chun-Ling Zhu, and Ya-Ping Zhang Different Matrilineal Contributions to Genetic Structure of Ethnic Groups in the Silk Road Region in China .............................................................................................................................................2265-2280 A. I. Kalmykova, D. A. Kwon, Ya. M. Rozovsky, N. Hueber, P. Capy, C. Maisonhaute, and V. A. Gvozdev Selective Expansion of the Newly Evolved Genomic Variants of Retrotransposon 1731 in the Drosophila Genomes ....................................................................................................................2281-2289 Yun-Huei Tzeng, Runsun Pan, and Wen-Hsiung Li Comparison of Three Methods for Estimating Rates of Synonymous and Nonsynonymous Nucleotide Substitutions ...............................................................................................................2290-2298 J. Pecon-Slattery, A. J. Pearks Wilkerson, W. J. Murphy, and S. J. O'Brien Phylogenetic Assessment of Introns and SINEs Within the Y Chromosome Using the Cat Family Felidae As a Species Tree ............................................................................................................2299-2309 Daniel E. Neafsey, Justin P. Blumenstiel, and Daniel L. Hartl Different Regulatory Mechanisms Underlie Similar Transposable Element Profiles in Pufferfish and Fruitflies ..................................................................................................................................2310-2318 Gwenaël Piganeau, Michael Gardner, and Adam Eyre-Walker A Broad Survey of Recombination in Animal Mitochondria ..........................................................2319-2325 Deena Schmidt and Rick Durrett Adaptive Evolution Drives the Diversification of Zinc-Finger Binding Domains ............................2326-2339 David A. Walsh, Eric Bapteste, Masahiro Kamekura, and W. Ford Doolittle

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Evolution of the RNA Polymerase B' Subunit Gene (rpoB') in Halobacteriales: a Complementary Molecular Marker to the SSU rRNA Gene ....................................................................................2340-2351 Yoshiyuki Suzuki Three-Dimensional Window Analysis for Detecting Positive Selection at Structural Regions of Proteins .........................................................................................................................................2352-2359 Errata: Shin-Han Shiu and Wen-Hsiung Li Origins, Lineage-Specific Expansions, and Multiple Losses of Tyrosine Kinases in Eukaryotes 2374-2375 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON: Vol. 117, No. 3, 7 December 2004. A review of the North American subspecies of the Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias). Robert W. Dickerman....................................................................................................................................... 242–250. A new species of Microgale (Lipotyphla: Tenrecidae: Oryzorictinae) from the Forêt des Mikea of southwestern Madagascar. Steven M. Goodman and Voahangy Soarimalala .............................. 251–265. Designation of the type species of Musaraneus Pomel, 1848 (Mammalia: Soricomorpha: Soricidae). Neal Woodman............................................................................................................. 266–270. The mammals of Palawan Island, Philippines. Jacob A. Esselstyn, Peter Widmann, and Lawrence R. Heaney ....................................................................................................................................... 271–302. A new species of Tropidonophis (Serpentes: Colubridae: Natricinae) from the D’Entrecasteaux Islands, Papua New Guinea. Fred Kraus and Allen Allison............................................................ 303–310. A new species of snake of the genus Omoadiphas (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae) from the Cordillera Nombre de Dios in northern Honduras. James R. McCranie and Franklin E. Castañeda 311–316. A new species of Kolpotocheirodon (Teleostei: Characidae: Cheirodontinae: Compsurini) from Bahia, northeastern Brazil, with a new diagnosis of the genus. Luiz R. Malabarba, Flávio C. T. Lima, and Stanley H. Weitzman...................................................................................................... 317–329. Astyanax biotae, a new species of stream fish from the Rio Paranapanema basin, upper Rio Paraná system, southeastern Brazil (Ostariophysi: Characiformes: Characidae). Ricardo M. C. Castro and Richard P. Vari ............................................................................................................. 330–338. Tetragonopterus lemniscatus (Characiformes: Characidae), a new species from the Corantijn River basin in Suriname. Ricardo C. Benine, Gabriela Zanon Pelição, and Richard P. Vari ......... 339–345. Longipalpa saltatrix, a new genus and species of the meiofaunal family Nerillidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from an anchihaline cave in Bermuda. Katrine Worsaae, Wolfgang Sterrer, and Thomas M. Iliffe .............................................................................................................................. 346–362. Neostrengeria lemaitrei, a new species of freshwater crab from Colombia (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pseudothelphusidae), and the vertical distribution of the genus. Martha R. Campos.................... 363–367. A new species of Agostocaris (Caridea: Agostocarididae) from Acklins Island, Bahamas. Fernando Alvarez, José Luis Villalobos, and Thomas M. Iliffe ....................................................... 368–376. A new species of caridean shrimp of the family Stylodactylidae from the eastern Pacific Ocean. Mary K. Wicksten and Joel W. Martin............................................................................................. 377–384. A new pedunculate barnacle (Cirripedia: Heteralepadidae) from the Northwest Atlantic. L. Buhl-Mortensen and W. A. Newman....................................................................................................... 385–397. Two new species of seven-spined Bathyconchoecia from the North Atlantic and Indian oceans (Crustacea: Ostracoda: Halocypridae). Louis S. Kornicker and J. A. Rudjakov............................. 398–407. The hermaphroditic sea anemone Anthopleura atodai n. sp. (Anthozoa: Actiniaria: Actiniidae) from Japan, with a redescription of A. hermaphroditica. Kensuke Yanagi and Marymegan Daly.......... 408–422. New species and new combinations in Rhysolepis (Heliantheae: Asteraceae). Harold Robinson and Abigail J. Moore ....................................................................................................................... 423–446. PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON: Vol. 117, No. 4, 20 December 2004. Studies on western Atlantic Octocorallia (Coelenterata: Anthozoa). Part 5: The genera Plumarella Gray, 1870; Acanthoprimnoa, n. gen.; and Candidella Bayer, 1954. Stephen D. Cairns and Frederick M. Bayer.......................................................................................................................... 447–487. A new species of the sea anemone Megalactis (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Actiniaria: Actinodendridae) from Taiwan and designation of a neotype for the type species of the genus. Adorian Ardelean and Daphne Gail Fautin .................................................................................................................. 488–504.

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A new genus and new species of crab of the family Xanthidae MacLeay, 1838 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura) from the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. Ana Rosa Vázquez-Bader and Adolfo Gracia .................................................................................................................................. 505–513. A new anchialine shrimp of the genus Procaris (Crustacea: Decapoda: Procarididae) from the Yucatan Peninsula. Richard v. Sternberg and Marilyn Schotte...................................................... 514–522. Macrobrachium patheinense, a new species of freshwater prawn (Crustacea: Decapoda: Palaemonidae) from Myanmar. Hla Phone and Hiroshi Suzuki ..................................................... 523–528. A new species of Enhydrosoma Boeck, 1872 (Copepoda: Harpacticoida: Cletodidae) from the Eastern Tropical Pacific. Samuel Gómez ....................................................................................... 529–540. New record of Ophiosyzygus disacanthus Clark, 1911 (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea: Ophiomyxidae) in the Caribbean Sea. Giomar Helena Borrero-Pérez and Milena Benavides-Serrato ............................................................................................................................................ 541–544. Sunagocia sainsburyi, a new flathead fish (Scorpaeniformes: Platycephalidae) from northwestern Australia. Leslie W. Knapp and Hisashi Imamura........................................................................... 545–550. A new species of Nannocharax (Characiformes: Distichodontidae) from Cameroon, with the description of contact organs and breeding tubercles in the genus. Richard P. Vari and Carl J. Ferraris Jr........................................................................................................................................ 551–563. Rhamdia guasarensis (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae), a new species of cave catfish from the Sierra de Perijá, northwestern Venezuela. Carlos DoNascimiento, Francisco Provenzano, and John G. Lundberg ......................................................................................................................................... 564–574. Taxonomic review of the fossil Procellariidae (Aves: Procellariiformes) described from Bermuda by R. W. Shufeldt. Storrs L. Olson....................................................................................................... 575–581. Revision of the genus Squamigera (Insecta: Zygentoma: Nicoletiidae) with descriptions of two new species. Luis Espinasa and Bethany Burnham .............................................................................. 582–593. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY: Vol. 133, No. 6, November 2004. Physiological Significance of the Weigh-In during Live-Release Angling Tournaments for Largemouth Bass Cory D. Suski, Shaun S. Killen, Steven. J. Cooke, James D. Kieffer, David P. Philipp and Bruce L. Tufts ....................................................................................................................................................... 1291 Behavioral Assumptions in Models of Fish Movement and Their Influence on Population Dynamics Robert Humston, Donald B. Olson and Jerald S. Ault ........................................................................... 1304 Changes in Prairie Stream Fish Assemblages Restricted to Isolated Streambed PoolsKenneth G. Ostrand and Gene R. Wilde ...................................................................................... 1329 Growth Variation, Settlement, and Spawning of Gray Snapper across a Latitudinal Gradient Kelly Denit and Su Sponaugle ............................................................................................................... 1339 Enhancing Productive Capacity in the Canadian Arctic: Assessing the Effectiveness of Instream Habitat Structures in Habitat Compensation Nicholas E. Jones and William M. Tonn ................................................................................................ 1356 Do Predators Influence the Distribution of Age-0 Kokanee in a Colorado Reservoir? Jill M. Hardiman, Brett M. Johnson and Patrick J. Martinez .................................................................. 1366 Evidence of a Lunar Gravitation Cue on Timing of Estuarine Entry by Pacific Salmon Smolts Paul DeVries, Fred Goetz, Kurt Fresh and David Seiler ....................................................................... 1379 The Influence of Climate on the Stock and Recruitment of Pink and Sockeye Salmon from the Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada R. J. Beamish, J. T. Schnute, A. J. Cass, C. M. Neville and R. M. Sweeting ........................................ 1396 Hydrosystem, Dam, and Reservoir Passage Rates of Adult Chinook Salmon and Steelhead in the Columbia and Snake Rivers Matthew L. Keefer, Christopher A. Peery, Theodore C. Bjornn, Michael A. Jepson and Lowell C. Stuehrenberg ......................................................................................................................................... 1413 Restoring Productivity of Salmon-Based Food Webs: Contrasting Effects of Salmon Carcass and Salmon Carcass Analog Additions on Stream-Resident Salmonids Mark S. Wipfli, John P. Hudson and John P. Caouette ......................................................................... 1440 Migration of Atlantic Salmon Postsmolts in Relation to Habitat Use in a Coastal System Gilles L. Lacroix, Paul McCurdy and Derek Knox .................................................................................. 1455 An Evaluation of the Use of Critical Swimming Speed for Determination of Culvert Water Velocity Criteria for Smallmouth Bass

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Stephan Peake ...................................................................................................................................... 1472 Habitat Factors Affecting Sockeye Salmon Redd Site Selection in Off-Channel Ponds of a River Floodplain Julie L. Hall and Robert C. Wissmar ...................................................................................................... 1480 A Biointegrity Index (IBI) for Coldwater Streams of Western Oregon and Washington Robert M. Hughes, Shay Howlin and Philip R. Kaufmann ..................................................................... 1497 A Comparison of the Suitability of Alizarin Red S and Calcein for Inducing a Nonlethally Detectable Mark in Juvenile Guppies Farrah Bashey ....................................................................................................................................... 1516 Comparison of Bluegill Consumption Rates by Largemouth Bass and Sunshine Bass in Structured and Nonstructured Artificial Environments Christopher W. Hickey and Christopher C. Kohler ................................................................................ 1524 Salmonids on the Fringe: Abundance, Species Composition, and Habitat Use of Salmonids in High-Gradient Headwater Streams, Southeast Alaska M. D. Bryant, N. D. Zymonas and B. E. Wright ...................................................................................... 1529 Electrofishing and Its Harmful Effects on Fish Robert F. Carline .................................................................................................................................... 1539 Regime Shifts in Lake Ecosystems: Pattern and Variation Edward Mills............................................................................................................................................ 1540 WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT: Vol. 12, No. 4, August 2004. Ecohydrology as a new tool for sustainable management of estuaries and coastal waters ......... 235 - 276 E. Wolanski, L.A. Boorman, L. Chícharo, et al. Fine sediment trapping in two mangrove-fringed estuaries exposed to contrasting land-use intensity, Palau, Micronesia ........................................................................................................... 277 - 283 S. Victor, Y. Golbuu, E. Wolanski, et al. The role of wetlands in wildlife migration in the Tarangire ecosystem, Tanzania ......................... 285 - 299 Emmanuel Gereta, Godwell Elias Ole Meing’ataki, Simon Mduma, et al. The influence of wetlands in regulating water quality in the Seronera River, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania ............................................................................................................................... 301 - 307 Emmanuel Gereta, Ephraim Mwangomo, Eric Wolanski WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT: Vol. 12, No. 5, October 2004. Biochemical properties of soils of undisturbed and disturbed mangrove forests of South Andaman (India) ............................................................................................................................................. 309 - 320 R. Dinesh, S. G. Chaudhuri, A. N. Ganeshamurthy, et al. An approach to optimal wetland mitigation using mathematical programming and geographic information system based wetland function estimation ................................................................. 321 - 331 J. P. Roise, K. W. Gainey, T. H. Shear Consolidation and volumetric soil-water content of salt marsh soils following habitat modification for mosquito control ....................................................................................................................... 333 - 342 M. J. Breitfuss and R. M. Connolly Age-specific seasonal storage dynamics ofPhragmites australis rhizomes: a preliminary study .. 343 - 351 Shiromi Karunaratne, Takashi Asaeda, Kentaro Yutani Colour-based estimation of rhizome age in Phragmites australis ................................................. 353 - 363 Shiromi Karunaratne, Takashi Asaeda, Satoru Toyooka Association between phosphorus and suspended solids in an Everglades treatment wetland dominated by submersed aquatic vegetation ................................................................................ 365 - 375 M. Farve, W. Harris, F. Dierberg, et al. Density-habitat relationships of mangrove creek fishes within the southeastern saline Everglades (USA), with reference to managed freshwater releases ................................................................ 377 - 394 Craig H. Faunce, Joseph E. Serafy, Jerome J. Lorenz Waterbird herbivory on a newly created wetland complex: potential implications for site management and habitat creation ................................................................................................. 395 - 408 M. L. Yallop, M. J. O’Connell, R. Bullock Relationships between National Wetlands Inventory maps and hydrophytic vegetation in Florida 409 - 418

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James P. Shepard, Hesham Abd-El Monsef, Loukas G. Arvanitis Differences in carbon fluxes between forested and cultivated micronesian tropical peatlands .... 419 - 427 Rodney A. Chimner and Katherine C. Ewel Ditches and canals in management of fens: opportunity or risk? A case study in the Drömling Natural Park, Germany .................................................................................................................. 429 - 445 Uta Langheinrich, Sabine Tischew, Richard M. Gersberg, et al. Changes in avian species composition following surface mining and reclamation along a riparian forest corridor in southern Indiana ................................................................................................. 447 - 457 M. J. Lacki, J. L. Fitzgerald, J. W. Hummer Water pollution control by aquatic vegetation of treatment wetlands ............................................ 459 - 471 Arthur F. M. Meuleman, Boudewijn Beltman, Robbert A. Scheffer Human impacts and the status of water quality in the Bundala RAMSAR wetland lagoon system in Southern Sri Lanka ........................................................................................................................ 473 - 482 S. C. Piyankarage, A. P. Mallawatantri, Y. Matsuno, et al. Spatial and temporal changes in salt marsh distribution in the Dee estuary, NW England, determined from aerial photographs .............................................................................................. 483 - 498 J. M. Huckle, R. H. Marrs, J. A. Potter Focusing management needs at the sub-catchment level via assessments of change in the cover of estuarine vegetation, Port Hacking, NSW, Australia ................................................................. 499 - 518 R. J. Williams and A. J. Meehan Sensitivity analysis of transportation corridor location in wetland areas: A multiobjective programming and GIS approach ................................................................................................... 519 - 529 J. P. Roise, T. H. Shear, J. V. Bianco The distribution and state of mangroves along the coast of Transkei, Eastern Cape Province, South Africa .................................................................................................................................... 531 - 541 J. B. Adams, B. M. Colloty, G. C. Bate WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT: Vol. 12, No. 6, December 2004. Neotropical wetlands: Building links among wetland scientists ..................................................... 543 - 546 J. F. Gottgens and R. H. Fortney Features and conservation of the Brazilian Pantanal wetland ....................................................... 547 - 552 Arnildo Pott and Vali Joana Pott New challenges in the management of the Brazilian Pantanal and catchment area .................... 553 - 561 Carolina Joana da Silva and Pierre Girard Landsat TM inventory and assessment of waterbird habitat in the southern altiplano of South America .......................................................................................................................................... 563 - 573 Terence P. Boyle, Sandra M. Caziani, Robert G. Waltermire Aquatic plant community composition and distribution along an inundation gradient at two ecologically-distinct sites in the Pantanal region of Brazil ............................................................. 575 - 585 Ronald H. Fortney, Michael Benedict, Johan F. Gottgens, et al. Neotropical wetlands: New instruments in ecosystem management ............................................ 587 - 596 Steven A. Loiselle, Simone Bastianoni, Luca Bracchini, et al. Status of knowledge, ongoing research, and research needs in Amazonian wetlands ................ 597 - 609 W. J. Junk and M. T. F. Piedade