ebook img

Advances in Cephalopod Science : biology, ecology, cultivation and fisheries PDF

468 Pages·2014·19.174 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Advances in Cephalopod Science : biology, ecology, cultivation and fisheries

ADVANCES IN MARINE BIOLOGY Series Editor MICHAEL LESSER Department of Molecular, Cellular and Biomedical Sciences University of New Hampshire, Durham, USA Editors Emeritus LEE A. FUIMAN University of Texas at Austin CRAIG M. YOUNG Oregon Institute of Marine Biology Advisory Editorial Board ANDREW J. GOODAY Southampton Oceanography Centre SANDRA E. SHUMWAY University of Connecticut AcademicPressisanimprintofElsevier 32JamestownRoad,LondonNW17BY,UK Radarweg29,POBox211,1000AEAmsterdam,TheNetherlands TheBoulevard,LangfordLane,Kidlington,Oxford,OX51GB,UK 225WymanStreet,Waltham,MA02451,USA 525BStreet,Suite1800,SanDiego,CA92101-4495,USA Firstedition2014 Copyright©2014ElsevierLtd.Allrightsreserved. Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,storedinaretrievalsystemortransmittedin anyformorbyanymeanselectronic,mechanical,photocopying,recordingorotherwise withoutthepriorwrittenpermissionofthepublisher. PermissionsmaybesoughtdirectlyfromElsevier’sScience&TechnologyRights DepartmentinOxford,UK:phone(+44)(0)1865843830;fax(+44)(0)1865853333; email:permissions@elsevier.com.Alternativelyyoucansubmityourrequestonlineby visitingtheElsevierwebsiteathttp://www.elsevier.com/locate/permissions,andselecting ObtainingpermissiontouseElseviermaterial Notice Noresponsibilityisassumedbythepublisherforanyinjuryand/ordamagetopersonsor propertyasamatterofproductsliability,negligenceorotherwise,orfromanyuseor operationofanymethods,products,instructionsorideascontainedinthematerialherein. Becauseofrapidadvancesinthemedicalsciences,inparticular,independentverificationof diagnosesanddrugdosagesshouldbemade. ISBN:978-0-12-800287-2 ISSN:0065-2881 ForinformationonallAcademicPresspublications visitourwebsiteatstore.elsevier.com PrintedandboundinUK 14151617 1110987654321 CONTRIBUTORS TO VOLUME 67 CarolineB.Albertin DepartmentofOrganismalBiologyandAnatomy,UniversityofChicago,Chicago,Illinois, USA Jose´ P.Andrade CCMAR-CIMARL.A.,CentrodeCienciasdoMardoAlgarve,CampusdeGambelas, UniversidadedoAlgarve,Faro,Portugal AlexanderI.Arkhipkin FalklandIslandsFisheriesDepartment,Stanley,FalklandIslands DiogoD.Barcellos Laborato´riodeEcossistemasPesqueiros(LabPesq),UniversidadedeSa˜oPaulo,Instituto Oceanogra´ficoPrac¸adoOceanogra´fico,Butanta˜,Sa˜oPaulo,SP,Brazil IsobelBloor SchoolofOceanSciences,BangorUniversity,MenaiBridge,Anglesey,UnitedKingdom KathrinS.R.Bolstad InstituteforAppliedEcologyNewZealand,AucklandUniversityofTechnology,Auckland, NewZealand HeatherE.Braid InstituteforAppliedEcologyNewZealand,AucklandUniversityofTechnology,Auckland, NewZealand FelipeBricen˜o InstituteforMarineandAntarcticStudies(IMAS),UniversityofTasmania,Hobart, Tasmania,Australia ClaudiaCaamal-Monsreal UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,FacultaddeCiencias,Universidad NacionalAuto´nomadeMe´xico,Yucata´n,Mexico MariaE.Chimal UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,FacultaddeCiencias,Universidad NacionalAuto´nomadeMe´xico,Yucata´n,Mexico NicolaDowney DepartmentofIchthyologyandFisheriesScience,RhodesUniversity,Grahamstown,and BayworldCentreforResearch&Education,Constantia,CapeTown,SouthAfrica EricEdsinger-Gonzales MolecularGeneticsUnit,OkinawaInstituteofScienceandTechnology,Okinawa,Japan AaronB.Evans InstituteforAppliedEcologyNewZealand,AucklandUniversityofTechnology,Auckland, NewZealand v vi ContributorstoVolume67 RitaM.Franco-Santos CenterforMarineStudies,UniversityofParana(UFPR),Parana,Brazil DirkFuchs FreieUniversita¨tBerlin,InstituteofGeologicalSciences,BranchPaleontology,Berlin, Germany PedroGallardo UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,FacultaddeCiencias,Universidad NacionalAuto´nomadeMe´xico,Yucata´n,Mexico MariaGasalla FisheriesEcosystemsLaboratory,OceanographicInstitute,UniversityofSa˜oPaulo,Sa˜o Paulo,Brazil IanG.Gleadall InternationalFisheriesScienceUnit,GraduateSchoolofAgriculturalSciences,Tohoku University,Sendai,Japan Michae¨lGras Universite´ deCaenBasse-Normandie,InstitutdeBiologieFondamentaleetApplique´e Department,UMRBOREA:BiologiedesORganismesetdesEcosyste`mesAquatiques, Esplanadedelapaix,CS14032,andBOREA,UMRCNRS7208,IRD207,UPMC, MNHN,UCBN,Caen,France BretGrasse MontereyBayAquarium,Monterey,California,USA CoreyP.Green DepartmentofEnvironmentandPrimaryIndustries,FisheriesVictoria,Queenscliff, Victoria,Australia AngelGuerra InstitutodeInvestigacionesMarinas(CSIC),Vigo,Spain ManuelHaimovici InstituteofOceanography,FederalUniversityofRioGrande,CEP,RioGrande,Brazil JenniferHofmeister CaldwellLaboratory,DepartmentofIntegrativeBiology,UniversityofCalifornia,Berkeley, California,USA Henk-JanT.Hoving GEOMAR,HelmholtzCentreforOceanResearchKiel,Kiel,Germany Jose´ Iglesias OceanographicCenterofVigo.SpanishInstituteofOceanography,SubidaaRadioFaro, Pontevedra,Spain HeatherJudkins DepartmentofBiologicalSciences,UniversityofSouthFloridaSt.Petersburg, St.Petersburg,Florida,USA ContributorstoVolume67 vii JesseT.Kelly InstituteforAppliedEcologyNewZealand,AucklandUniversityofTechnology,Auckland, NewZealand HideakiKidokoro JapanSeaNationalFisheriesResearch,Institute,FisheriesResearchAgency,Suido-cho, Niigata,Japan Noussithe´ Koueta UMRBOREA,MNHN,UPMC,UCBN,CNRS-7028,IRD-207,IBFAUniversite´ de CaenBasse-Normandie,EsplanadedelaPaix,Caencedex,France VladimirV.Laptikhovsky CEFAS,Lowestoft,Suffolk,UnitedKingdom CharlesLePabic UMRBOREA,MNHN,UPMC,UCBN,CNRS-7028,IRD-207,IBFAUniversite´ de CaenBasse-Normandie,EsplanadedelaPaix,Caencedex,France EvgeniaLefkaditou HelenicCentreforMarineResearch,AghiosKosmas,Hellinikon,Athens,Greece MarekR.Lipin(cid:1)ski DepartmentofIchthyologyandFisheriesScience,RhodesUniversity,Grahamstown, SouthAfrica SilviaA.P.Lourenc¸o IPMADiv.RP,DepartamentodoMareRecursosmarinhos,Lisboa,Portugal Jose´ E.A.R.Marian DepartamentodeZoologia,InstitutodeBiocieˆncias,UniversidadedeSa˜oPaulo, SaoPaulo,Brazil MaiteMascaro´ UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,UniversidadNacionalAuto´nomade Me´xico,PuertodeAbrigos/n,Sisal,Yucata´n,Me´xico JenniferMather PsychologyDepartment,UniversityofLethbridge,Lethbridge,Alberta,Canada NatalieA.Moltschaniwskyj SchoolofEnvironmental&LifeSciences,UniversityofNewcastle,Ourimbah,NewSouth Wales,Australia RyutaNakajima Department of Art and Design, University of Minnesota Duluth, Duluth, Minnesota, USA MikeNavarro IntegrativeOceanographyDivision,andCenterforMarineBiodiversityandConservation, ScrippsInstitutionofOceanography,UniversityofCalifornia,SanDiego,LaJolla, California,USA viii ContributorstoVolume67 OwenC.Nichols SchoolforMarineScienceandTechnology,UniversityofMassachusetts–Dartmouth, Fairhaven,andCenterforCoastalStudies,Provincetown,Massachusetts,USA CristinaPascual UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,FacultaddeCiencias,Universidad NacionalAuto´nomadeMe´xico,Yucata´n,Mexico Joa˜oPereira InstitutodeInvestigac¸a˜odasPescasedoMar(IPIMAR),Lisboa,Portugal JoseAngelA.Perez CentrodeCieˆnciasTecnolo´gicasdaTerraedoMarUniversidadedoValedoItaja´ı,Itaja´ı, SantaCatarina,Brazil UwePiatkowski GEOMAR,HelmholtzCentreforOceanResearchKiel,Kiel,Germany GrahamJ.Pierce Oceanlab,UniversityofAberdeen,Newburgh,Aberdeenshire,UnitedKingdom,and CESAM&DepartamentodeBiologia,UniversidadedeAveiro,Aveiro,Portugal CristinaPita Oceanlab,UniversityofAberdeen,Newburgh,Aberdeenshire,UnitedKingdom,and CESAM&DepartamentodeBiologia,UniversidadedeAveiro,Aveiro,Portugal JorgeE.Ramos InstituteforMarineandAntarcticStudies,MarineResearchLaboratoriesTaroona,Nubeena Crescent,Taroona,Tasmania,Australia AmandaReid AustralianMuseumResearchInstitute,Sydney,NewSouthWales,Australia MichaelRoberts RhodesUniversity,Grahamstown,andOceans&CoastsResearch,Victoria&Alfred Waterfront,CapeTown,SouthAfrica Jean-PaulRobin Universite´ deCaenBasse-Normandie,UMRBOREA:BiologiedesORganismesetdes Ecosyste`mesAquatiques,Esplanadedelapaix,CS14032,14032Caen,France,andUMR BOREA,UMRCNRS7208,IRD207,UPMC,MNHN,UCBN,14032Caen,France PaulG.K.Rodhouse BritishAntarcticSurvey,Cambridge,UnitedKingdom AlmendraRodriguez ElColegiodelaFronteraSur,ColoniaCasasano,Cuautla,Morelos,Mexico ClydeF.E.Roper SmithsonianInstitution,NationalMuseumofNaturalHistory,Washington,Districtof Columbia,USA ContributorstoVolume67 ix CarlosRosas UnidadMultidisciplinariadeDocenciaeInvestigacio´n,FacultaddeCiencias,Universidad NacionalAuto´nomadeMe´xico,Yucata´n,Mexico KatinaRoumbedakis Laborato´rioSanidadedeOrganismosAqua´ticos.UniversidadeFederaldeSantaCatarina, Florianopolis,Brazil KazuhiroSadayasu MarineFisheriesResearchandDevelopmentCenter,FisheriesResearchAgency, Yokohama,Kanagawa,Japan MitsuoSakai NationalResearchInstituteofFarSeasFisheries,Shizuoka,Japan WarwickH.H.Sauer DepartmentofIchthyologyandFisheriesScience,RhodesUniversity,Grahamstown, SouthAfrica SusumuSegawa TokyoUniversityofFisheries,Minato-ku,Tokyo,Japan MichaelVecchione NMFSNationalSystematicsLaboratory,NationalMuseumofNaturalHistory,Washington, DC,USA EricaA.G.Vidal CenterforMarineStudies,UniversityofParana(UFPR),Parana,Brazil RogerVillanueva InstitutdeCie`nciesdelMar(CSIC),Barcelona,Spain JamesWood MountsBotanicalGarden,WestPalmBeach,Florida,USA Jose´ C.C.Xavier InstituteofMarineResearch,DepartmentofLifeSciences,UniversityofCoimbra,Coimbra, Portugal,andBritishAntarcticSurvey,NERC,Cambridge,UnitedKingdom LouZeidberg DepartmentofEcologyandEvolutionaryBiology,UniversityofCalifornia,LosAngeles, California,USA SERIES CONTENTS FOR LAST FIFTEEN YEARS* Volume 35, 1999. Creasey,S.S.andRogers,A.D.Populationgeneticsofbathyalandabyssal organisms. pp. 1–151. Brey,T.Growthperformanceandmortalityinaquaticmacrobenthicinver- tebrates. pp. 153–223. Volume 36, 1999. Shulman,G.E.andLove,R.M.Thebiochemicalecologyofmarinefishes. pp. 1–325. Volume 37, 1999. His, E., Beiras, R. and Seaman, M. N. L. The assessment of marine pollution—bioassays with bivalve embryos and larvae. pp. 1–178. Bailey, K. M., Quinn, T. J., Bentzen, P. and Grant, W. S. Population structure and dynamics of walleye pollock, Theragra chalcogramma. pp. 179–255. Volume 38, 2000. Blaxter, J. H. S. The enhancement of marine fish stocks. pp. 1–54. Bergstro€m, B. I. The biology of Pandalus. pp. 55–245. Volume 39, 2001. Peterson, C.H.The “ExxonValdez”oil spillin Alaska: acuteindirectand chronic effects on the ecosystem. pp. 1–103. Johnson, W. S., Stevens, M. and Watling, L. Reproduction and develop- ment of marine peracaridans. pp. 105–260. Rodhouse,P.G.,Elvidge,C.D.andTrathan,P.N.Remotesensingofthe global light-fishing fleet: an analysis of interactions with oceanography, other fisheries and predators. pp. 261–303. Volume 40, 2001. Hemmingsen,W.andMacKenzie,K.TheparasitefaunaoftheAtlanticcod, Gadus morhua L. pp. 1–80. * Thefulllistofcontentsforvolumes1–37canbefoundinvolume38 xiii xiv SeriesContentsforLastFifteenYears Kathiresan, K. and Bingham, B. L. Biology of mangroves and mangrove ecosystems. pp. 81–251. Zaccone,G.,Kapoor,B.G.,Fasulo,S.andAinis,L.Structural,histochem- ical and functional aspects of the epidermis of fishes. pp. 253–348. Volume 41, 2001. Whitfield, M. Interactions between phytoplankton and trace metals in the ocean. pp. 1–128. Hamel,J.-F.,Conand,C.,Pawson,D.L.andMercier,A.Theseacucumber Holothuria scabra (Holothuroidea: Echinodermata): its biology and exploitation as beche-de-Mer. pp. 129–223. Volume 42, 2002. Zardus, J. D. Protobranch bivalves. pp. 1–65. Mikkelsen, P. M. Shelled opisthobranchs. pp. 67–136. Reynolds, P. D. The Scaphopoda. pp. 137–236. Harasewych, M. G. Pleurotomarioidean gastropods. pp. 237–294. Volume 43, 2002. Rohde, K. Ecology and biogeography of marine parasites. pp. 1–86. Ramirez Llodra, E. Fecundity and life-history strategies in marine inverte- brates. pp. 87–170. Brierley, A. S. and Thomas, D. N. Ecology of southern ocean pack ice. pp. 171–276. Hedley,J.D.andMumby,P.J.Biologicalandremotesensingperspectives of pigmentation in coral reef organisms. pp. 277–317. Volume 44, 2003. Hirst, A. G., Roff, J. C. and Lampitt, R. S. A synthesis of growth rates in epipelagic invertebrate zooplankton. pp. 3–142. Boletzky, S. von. Biology of early life stages in cephalopod molluscs. pp. 143–203. Pittman,S.J.andMcAlpine,C.A.Movementsofmarinefishanddecapod crustaceans: process, theory and application. pp. 205–294. Cutts, C. J. Culture of harpacticoid copepods: potential as live feed for rearing marine fish. pp. 295–315. Volume 45, 2003. Cumulative Taxonomic and Subject Index. SeriesContentsforLastFifteenYears xv Volume 46, 2003. Gooday, A. J. Benthic foraminifera (Protista) as tools in deep-water palaeoceanography: environmental influences on faunal characteristics. pp. 1–90. Subramoniam,T.andGunamalai,V.Breedingbiologyoftheintertidalsand crab, Emerita (Decapoda: Anomura). pp. 91–182. Coles,S.L.andBrown,B.E.Coralbleaching—capacityforacclimatization and adaptation. pp. 183–223. DalsgaardJ.,St.JohnM.,KattnerG.,Mu¨ller-NavarraD.andHagenW.Fatty acid trophic markers in the pelagic marine environment. pp. 225–340. Volume 47, 2004. Southward, A. J., Langmead, O., Hardman-Mountford, N. J., Aiken, J., Boalch, G. T., Dando, P. R., Genner, M. J., Joint, I., Kendall, M. A., Halliday, N. C., Harris, R. P., Leaper, R., Mieszkowska, N., Pingree, R. D., Richardson, A. J., Sims, D.W., Smith, T., Walne, A. W. and Hawkins, S. J. Long-term oceanographic and ecological research in the western English Channel. pp. 1–105. Queiroga, H. and Blanton, J. Interactions between behaviour and physical forcinginthecontrolofhorizontaltransportofdecapodcrustaceanlarvae. pp. 107–214. Braithwaite,R.A.andMcEvoy,L.A.Marinebiofoulingonfishfarmsand its remediation. pp. 215–252. Frangoulis, C., Christou, E. D. and Hecq, J. H. Comparison of marine copepodoutfluxes:nature,rate,fateandroleinthecarbonandnitrogen cycles. pp. 253–309. Volume 48, 2005. Canfield,D.E.,Kristensen,E.andThamdrup,B.AquaticGeomicrobiology. pp.1–599. Volume 49, 2005. Bell,J.D.,Rothlisberg,P.C.,Munro,J.L.,Loneragan,N.R.,Nash,W.J., Ward, R. D. and Andrew, N. L. Restocking and stock enhancement of marine invertebrate fisheries. pp. 1–358. Volume 50, 2006. Lewis,J.B.BiologyandecologyofthehydrocoralMilleporaoncoralreefs. pp. 1–55.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.