MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA....

66
CCV U NIV E R SI D A D NACIONAL AUTO NOMA M EXI C O MI POR H A B L A R A EL RAZA E SPI RI TV BOLETÍN NO. 205 MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. ELENA CASO MUÑOZ¨. JUNIO DE 2006

Transcript of MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA....

Page 1: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

CCV

U N IV ER SI DA D N A CIO N A L A U T ON O M A M E X IC O

MIPOR

HA

B

LA

R A

EL

RA

ZA

ES

PIR

IT

V

BOLETÍN NO. 205

MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA

¨DRA. MA. ELENA CASO MUÑOZ¨.

JUNIO DE 2006

Page 2: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

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.

Page 3: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

3

LIBROS

ADDISCOTT, T.M., 2005. Nitrate, Agriculture and the Environment. – Wallingford,Oxfordshire, United Kingdom: CABI Publishing, 279 p.

BOTELLO, A.V., J. RENDÓN von OSTEN, G. GOLD-BOUCHOT y C. AGRAZ-

HERNÁNDEZ, 2005. Golfo de México, Contaminación e Impacto Ambiental: Diagnóstico y Tendencias. 2da. Edición. – México: Univ. Autón. de Campeche, Univ. Nal. Autón. de México, Instituto Nacional de Ecología, 696 p.

CANEVARI, PABLO, GONZALO CASTRO, MICHEL SALLABERRY y LUIS

GERMÁN NARANJO, 2001. Guía de los Chorlos y Playeros de la Región Neotropical. – Colombia: American Bird Conservancy, WWF-US, Humedales para las Américas y Manomet Conservation Science, Asociación CALIDRIS, 134 p.

CHIARELLI, A.B., 1972. Taxonomic Atlas of Living Primates. – London: Academic

Press, 363 p. FISCHER, GERHARD AND GEROLD WEFER (Editors), 1999. Use of Proxies in

Paleocenoagraphy. Examples from the South Atlantic. – Berlin: Springer, 735 p.

NEWELL, G.E. AND R.C. NEWELL, 1963. Marine Plankton. A Practical Guide. –

London: Hutchinson Educational, 206 p. RIVERA ARRIAGA, EVELIA, GUILLERMO J. VILLALOBOS ZAPATA, ISAAC

AZUZ ADEATH Y FRANCISCO ROSADO MAY (Editores), 2004. El Manejo Costero en México. -- Campeche, México: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche, Centro de Ecología, Pesquerías y Oceanografía del Golfo de México, 654 p.

SAETHER, OLA M. & PATRICE DE CARITAT (Editors), 1997. Geochemical

Processes, Weathering and Groundwater Recharge in Catchments. -- Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema, 400 p.

SCHLESINGER, WILLIAM H., 1997. Biogeochemistry. An Analysis of Global

Change. Second edition. -- Amsterdam: Academic Press, 588 p.

Page 4: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

4

SHERWOOD LOLLAR, B., (Editor) 2005. Environmental Geochemistry. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 630 p., il. ( Treatise on Geochemistry, Volume 9. (H.D. Holland & K.K. Turekian, Eds.)).

TESIS

AVILA TORRES, ENRIQUE, 2006. Ecología de la Asociación Haliclona caerulea

(Porifera: Demospongiae) y Jania adherens (Rhodophyta: Corallinales) en la Bahía de Mazatlán. Tesis de Doctorado. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 136 p.

BAUTISTA GUERRERO, ERIC, 2006. Diversidad y Abundancia de Esponjas

Perforadoras en dos Sistemas Arrecifales de Bahías de Huatulco (Oaxaca, México). Tesis de Maestría. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 83 p.

BERLANGA ROBLES, CÉSAR ALEJANDRO, 2006. Caracterización de los

Paisajes Costeros de Sinaloa y norte de Nayarit, México a Través del Análisis de los Patrones de Cobertura del Terreno. Tesis de Doctorado. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 204 p.

DEL RÍO CHULJAK, ALEJANDRO, 2006. Distribución Espacial y Temporal de

Fósforo y Silicio en Aguas de las Lagunas Costeras de Sinaloa. Tesis de Maestría. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 135 p.

IBARRA RIVERA, JOSÉ SOLEDAD, 2006. Los Géneros Gnathophausia y

Neognathophausia (Malacostracea: Lophogastrida) en el Pacífico Mexicano. Tesis de Licenciatura. Instituto Tecnológico de Los Mochis, 70 p.

LÓPEZ AGUIAR, LLUVIA KORYNTHIA, 2006. Distribución Espacial y Estacional

de las Principales Especies Químicas del Nitrógeno en Aguas de las Lagunas Costeras de Sinaloa. Tesis de Maestría. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 204 p.

RODRÍGUEZ TIRADO, VÍCTOR ALFONSO, 2006. Efecto de Factores

Ambientales (pH, Temperatura y Salinidad) en la Biosorción de Metales por la Bacteria Bacillus jeotgali CEPA U3. Tesis de Maestría. U.N.A.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 90 p.

TORRES MORALES, MANUEL, 1975. Biología Pesquera de Ictalarus punctatus

(Rafinesque), en la Presa Marte R. Gómez, Noreste de México. Tesis de

Page 5: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

5

Licenciatura. Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, 46 p.

ZAMORANO DE HARO, PABLO, 2006. Biocenosis y Distribución de los

Moluscos Asociados al Talud Continental del Pacífico Mexicano. Tesis de Maestría. U.NA.M., Posgrado en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, 124 p.

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS

BOTÁNICA MARINA: Vol. 49, No. 2, 2006. BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 75, No. 2, August 2005. Vol. 75, No. 3, September 2005. Vol. 76, No. 1, January 2006. Vol. 76, No. 3, March 2006. Vol. 76, No. 4, April 2006. CIENCIAS DEL MAR, U.A.S.: Vol. 17, 2004. CONSERVATION IN PRACTICE: Vol. 7, No. 2, April-June, 2006. CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE: No. 506, 8 June, 2006. No. 507, 8 June, 2006. No. 508, 8 June, 2006. COPEIA: No. 2, May 26, 2006. CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS: Vol. 84, No. 22, May 29, 2006. Vol. 84, No. 23, June 5, 2006. Vol. 84, No. 24, June 12, 2006. Vol. 84, No. 25, June 19, 2006. CRUSTACEANA: Vol. 78, Part 11, December 2005.

Page 6: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

6

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Vol. 12, No. 3, May 2006. ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY: Vol. 49, No. 3, January 2006. Vol. 49, No. 7, April 2006. ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 142, No. 1, July 2006. Vol. 142, No. 2, July 2006. Vol. 142, No. 3, August 2006. Vol. 143, No. 1, September 2006. Vol. 143, No. 2 September 2006. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 23, No. 7, July 2004. EXPLORATIONS: Vol. 11, No. 3, Winter 2005. (DVD: Oceans and Air).

Vol. 12, No. 3, Winter 2006 (DVD: Seas of Genes).

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER: No. 434, 2005: Sampling Methods Applied to Fisheries Science: A manual. By Emygdio Landerset Cadima, et. al.

GACETA UNAM:

No. 3,897, 22 de mayo de 2006. No. 3,898, 25 de mayo de 2006. No. 3,900, 1º. de junio de 2006. No. 3,901, 5 de junio de 2006. No. 3,902, 8 de junio de 2006. No. 3,903, 12 de junio de 2006. No. 3,904, 15 de junio de 2006. No. 3,905, 19 de junio de 2006. No. 3,906, 22 de junio de 2006.

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 15, No. 3, May 2006.

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 63, No. 4, May 2006.

Page 7: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

7

INDIAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCES: Vol. 34, No. 4, December 2005. INDUSTRIA ACUÍCOLA: Vol. 2, No. 4, mayo de 2006. ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE: Vol. XVIII, No. 1, 2006. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 33, No. 5, May 2006. Vol. 33, No. 6, June 2006. JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY: Vol. 26, No. 2, May 2006. JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY: Vol. 94, No. 3, May 2006. JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH: Index Volume 63, Nos. 1-6, 2005. JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH: Vol. 28, No. 5, May 2006. JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 55, No. 4, May 2006. JOURNAL OF SHELLFISH RESEARCH: Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005. Vol. 24, No. 2, August 2005. Vol. 24, No. 3, October 2005. Vol. 24, No. 4, December 2005. Vol. 25, No. 1, April 2006. LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 51, No. 3, May 2006. MARINE BIOLOGY RESEARCH (Formerly Sarsia and Ophelia): Vol. 2, No. 1, 2006. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 311, April 13, 2006.

Page 8: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

8

Vol. 312, April 24, 2006. Vol. 313, May 11, 2006. Vol. 314, May 22, 2006. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION: Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2006. OCEANUS: Vol. 45, No. 1, April 2006. PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM: Scientific Results: Vol. 185: Izu-Mariana Margin. Sites 801 and 1149. 12 April -14 June 1999. SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA: Vol. 85, No. 2, December 2005. TECHNICAL REPORTS OF THE ALLAN HANCOCK FOUNDATION:

No. 2, April 1980: Illustrated Key to the Planktonic Copepods of San Pedro Bay, California. By John K. Dawson and Geraldine Knatz.

UNIVERSIDAD Y CIENCIA: No. Especial 1, 2004. Vol. 21, No. 42, Diciembre de 2005. ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA: Vol. 35, No. 3, May 2006.

Page 9: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

9

PUBLICACIONES PERIODICAS BOTÁNICA MARINA: Vol. 49, No. 2, 2006. SULFUR CYCLING AND SULFIDE INTRUSION IN MIXED SOUTHEAST ASIAN TROPICAL SEAGRASS MEADOWS Holmer, Marianne - Pedersen, Ole - Ikejima, Kou...................................................................................... 91 VARIABILITY OF RUPPIA CIRRHOSA IN TWO COASTAL LAGOONS WITH DIFFERING ANTHROPOGENIC STRESSES Pergent, Gérard - Pasqualini, Vanina - Pergent-Martini, Christine - Ferrat, Lila - Fernandez, Catherine .................................................................................................................................................. 103 A RE-EVALUATION OF THE TAXONOMIC STATUS OF HALOPHILA EUPHLEBIA MAKINO (HYDROCHARITACEAE) BASED ON MORPHOLOGICAL FEATURES AND ITS SEQUENCE DATA Uchimura, Masayuki - Jean Faye, Etienne - Shimada, Satoshi - Arai, Shogo - Inoue, Tetsunori - Nakamura, Yoshiyuki................................................................................................................................ 111 GANONEMA VERMICULARE SP. NOV. (LIAGORACEAE, RHODOPHYTA), A NEW SPECIES FROM PUERTO RICO, CARIBBEAN SEA Ballantine, David L. - Abbott, Isabella A. .................................................................................................. 122 ANTITHAMNIONELLA MULTIGLANDULOSA SP. NOV. (RHODOPHYTA, CERAMIACEAE) FROM THE ATLANTIC IBERIAN PENINSULA Secilla, Antonio - Santolaria, Alberto - Díez, Isabel - Gorostiaga, José María......................................... 129 CHANGES IN THE BENTHIC ALGAL FLORA OF LINOSA ISLAND (STRAITS OF SICILY, MEDITERRANEAN SEA) Serio, Donatella - Alongi, Giuseppina - Catra, Marcello - Cormaci, Mario - Furnari, Giovanni ................ 135 SEASONAL AND SPATIAL DYNAMICS OF NOCTILUCA SCINTILLANS IN A SEMI-ENCLOSED BAY IN THE NORTHEASTERN PART OF HONG KONG Liu, Xue-Jun - Wong, C. Kim .................................................................................................................... 145 TAXONOMIC APPRAISAL OF MELOSIRA ARCTICA DICKIE AND DESCRIPTION OF A NEW VARIETY (BACILLARIOPHYTA) Kaczmarska, Irena - Jahn, Regine ........................................................................................................... 151 CHANGES IN GROWTH, CHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE AND FATTY ACID COMPOSITION WITH CULTURE AGE IN BATCH CULTURES OF PHAEODACTYLUM TRICORNUTUM AND CHAETOCEROS MUELLERI (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) Liang, Ying - Beardall, John - Heraud, Philip............................................................................................ 165 PURIFICATION AND SOME PROPERTIES OF A D-FRUCTOSE-1,6-BISPHOSPHATE ALDOLASE FROM THE RED ALGA, GRACILARIA CHORDA HOLMES Kakita, Hirotaka - Kamishima, Hiroshi - Inouye, Kuniyo........................................................................... 174 BIOMASS AND DOCOSAHEXAENOIC ACID FORMATION BY SCHIZOCHYTRIUM MANGROVEI SK-02 AT LOW SALT CONCENTRATIONS Unagul, Panida - Assantachai, Caetharin - Phadungruengluij, Saranya - Pongsuteeragul, Thanapol - Suphantharika, Manop - Verduyn, Cornelis ........................................................................................... 182 BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 75, No. 2, August 2005. Assessment of Dermal Exposure to Pesticides Under "Pick Your Own" Harvesting Conditions ............. 211 W. J. Krol, T. Arsenault, M. J. I. Mattina Dermal Pesticide Exposure During Seed Corn Production ...................................................................... 219 B. J. Hughes, L. G. Olsen, L. Schmelzer, P. Hite, P. Bills

Page 10: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

10

Absence of Acute Testicular Toxicity of Methyl-Tert Butyl Ether and Breakdown Products in Mice........ 228 J. E. Billitti, B. C. Faulkner, B. W. Wilson New Phytochemical Screening Method for Biomarkers in Plants Exposed to Herbicides ....................... 236 H. W. Ravn, M. Hjorth, L. Lauridsen, P. Kudsk, S. K. Mathiassen, L. Mondolot Selenium, Cadmium, Zinc, Copper, and Iron Concentrations in Heart and Aorta of Patients Exposed to Environmental Cadmium ...................................................................................................................... 246 M. Uetani, E. Kobayashi, Y. Suwazono, Y. Okubo, R. Honda, T. Kido, K. Nogawa Arsenic Residues in Hair Samples from Cattle in Some Arsenic Affected Areas of West Bengal, India .......................................................................................................................................................... 251 D. Nandi, R. C. Patra, D. Swarup Capillary Gas Chromatography Method for Alachlor in Pesticide Formulations ...................................... 257 H. Karasali, G. Balayiannis, H. Anagnostopoulos, A. Hourdakis Atrazine Sorption Dynamics in Acid-Surface Soils ................................................................................... 264 M. Arias-Estévez, B. Soto-González, E. López-Periago, B. Cancho-Grande, J. Simal-Gándara Arsenic, Cadmium, Chromium, Cobalt, and Copper in Different Types of Chinese Tea ......................... 272 W.-Y. Han, Y.-Z. Shi, L.-F. Ma, J.-Y. Ruan Evaluation of Lead and Cadmium Levels in Some Commonly Consumed Vegetables in the Niger-Delta Oil Area of Nigeria ........................................................................................................................... 278 G. E. Eriyamremu, S. O. Asagba, I. A. Akpoborie, S. I. Ojeaburu Cadmium and Lead Contamination in Tap Water Samples From Tokat, Turkey..................................... 284 M. Tuzen, M. Soylak, K. Parlar Uptake of Lead by a Ciliate, Stylonychia mytilus, Isolated from Industrial Effluents: Potential Use in Bioremediation of Wastewater.................................................................................................................. 290 A. Rehman, S. Ashraf, J. I. Qazi, A. R. Shakoori Algal Biomass: An Economical Method for Removal of Chromium from Tannery Effluent...................... 297 U. N. Rai, S. Dwivedi, R. D. Tripathi, O. P. Shukla, N. K. Singh Organochlorine Insecticide Residues in Nipe Bay, Cuba......................................................................... 304 G. Arencibia-Carballo, L. Orta-Arrazcaeta, N. Capetillo-Piñar, I. Perez, R. Hernández, S. C. Gardner, A. Ortega-Rubio Lanthanide Contamination and Strong Positive Europium Anomalies in the Surface Sediments of the Santa Rosalía Copper Mining Region, Baja California Peninsula, Mexico ........................................ 308 E. Shumilin, G. Rodríguez-Figueroa, D. Sapozhnikov Decrease in Microbial Biomass Due to Pesticide Application/Residues in Soils Under Different Cropping Systems .................................................................................................................................... 316 M. N. Jha and S. K. Mishra Dissipation of Lambda-Cyhalothrin on Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) and Removal of Its Residues by Different Washing Processes and Steaming....................................................................... 324 S. Jayakrishnan, A. K. Dikshit, J. P. Singh, D. C. Pachauri Cytotoxicity of Organophosphorus Ester (OP) Insecticides and Cytotoxic Synergism of 2-Acetoxyacetylaminofluorene (2AAAF) in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) Cells ...................................... 329 E. D. Wagner, S. M. McMillan, M. J. Plewa Biodegradation of Pesticide Pollutants by Two Kinds of Enzymes Coexpressed in Genetically Engineered Bacteria ................................................................................................................................. 335 W. S. Lan, J. Cong, H. Jiang, B. G. Gu, Ch. L. Qiao Acute Toxicity of the Pesticide Dichlorvos and the Herbicide Butachlor to Tadpoles of Four Anuran Species ..................................................................................................................................................... 343 B. R. Geng, D. Yao, Q. Q. Xue Acute Toxicity of Thallium to Daphnia magna and Ceriodaphnia dubia................................................... 350 T.-S. Lin, P. Meier, J. Nriagu Acute Toxicity of Gallium and Effects of Salinity on Gallium Toxicity to Brackish and Marine Organisms................................................................................................................................................. 356 N. Onikura, A. Nakamura, K. Kishi

Page 11: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

11

Developmental Toxicity of Drinking Water Disinfection By-Products to Embryos of the African Clawed Frog (Xenopus laevis).................................................................................................................. 361 L. M. Brennan, M. W. Toussaint, D. M. Kumsher, W. E. Dennis, A. B. Rosencrance, C. Brown, W. H. van der Schalie, H. S. Gardner Acute Toxicity of Dichlorvos (DDVP) to Fingerling Mirror Carp, Cyprinus carpio L.................................. 368 M.-S. Ural and M. Çalta Biological Responses of Cyanobacteria to Insecticides and Their Insecticide Degrading Potential........ 374 M. N. Jha and S. K. Mishra Effects of Four Rice Herbicides on Seed Germination and Seedling Growth of a Threatened Vascular Plant Penthorum chinense Pursh .............................................................................................. 382 X.-Y. Luo and H. Ikeda Effects of Metal (Cd, Cu, Zn) Interactions on the Profiles of Metallothionein-Like Proteins in the Nile Fish Oreochromis niloticus ....................................................................................................................... 390 K. Eroglu, G. Atli, M. Canli Chromate Reduction by Serratia marcescens Isolated From Tannery Effluent ....................................... 400 V. L. Campos, R. Moraga, J. Yánez, C. A. Zaror, M. A. Mondaca Nile Tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus L., Reproduction Inhibition by Dietary Exposure to Aroclor 1254 ..... 407 A. M. Coimbra and M. A. Reis-Henriques BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 75, No. 3, September 2005. Evaluation of Possible Health Effects of Pyrethroid Insecticides, Bifenthrin 10% WP, and Deltamethrin 25% WG, on Spraymen Exposed in a Field Trial in India................................................... 413 H. C. Srivastava, G. P. Kumar, A. Hassan, M. Dabhi, C. S. Pant, R. S. Yadav Inhibitory Effect of a Herbicide Formulation on Toxicity of Malathion to the Worm Eisenia fetida........... 421 D. W. Butler and P. A. Verrell Sublethal Effects of the Herbicide Glyphosate on Amphibian Metamorphosis and Development........... 429 K. Cauble and R. S. Wagner Environmental Dose of Toxaphene Does Not Affect the Growth, Stress Response, and Selected Physiological Parameters in Juvenile Arctic Charr, (Salvelinus alpinus).................................................. 436 C. A. Blanar, M. A. Curtis, H. M. Chan Biodegradation of Pyrene and Phenanthrene in Soil Using Immobilized Fungi Fusarium sp.................. 443 P. Li, H. Li, F. Stagnitti, X. Wang, H. Zhang, Z. Gong, W. Liu, X. Xiong, L. Li, C. Austin, D. A. Barry Photodegradation of Bistrifluron in Aqueous Acetonitrile Solution by UV Irradiation ............................... 451 K. H. Liu, J. K. Moon, H. S. Choi, Y. G. Youn, B. S. Park, H. S. Lee, J. H. Kim Rapid Method for Determination of Chloramphenicol Residues in Honey Using Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry....................................................................................................... 459 C. Sánchez-Brunete, B. Albero, E. Miguel, J. L. Tadeo Effect of Saharan Dust on Biodegradation of Phenol by White Rot Fungi ............................................... 466 S. Sanin, M. Arisoy, R. Tipirdamaz, C. Saydam Comparison of the Effects of Arsenic (V), Cadmium (II), and Mercury (II) Single Metal and Mixed Metal Exposure in Radish, Raphanus sativus, Fescue Grass, Festuca ovina, and Duckweed, Lemna minor ............................................................................................................................................. 474 H. A. Charlier, C. Albertson, C. Thornock, L. Warner, T. Hurst, R. Ellis Comparative Chronic Toxicity of Pyridine, a-Picoline, and ß-Picoline to Lemna minor L. and Chlorella vulgaris B................................................................................................................................... 482 B. B. Singh and R. Chandra Toxicity of Organophosphorous Insecticides to Three Cyanobacterial and Five Green Algal Species ... 490 J. Ma, P. Wang, C. Huang, N. Lu, W. Qin, Y. Wang Accumulation, Distribution, and Toxicology of Copper Sulfate in Juvenile Giant Freshwater Prawns, Macrobrachium rosenbergii ...................................................................................................................... 497

Page 12: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

12

N. Li, Y. L. Zhao, J. Yang Sublethal Effects of Zn++ and Cd++ on Respiration Rate, Ammonia Excretion, and O:N Ratio of Donax trunculus (Bivalvia; Donacidae)..................................................................................................... 505 L. Neuberger-Cywiak, Y. Achituv, E. M. Garcia Differences in the Effects of Metals on Growth of Two Freshwater Green Algae (Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata (Korshikov) Hindak and Gonium pectorale Müller) ............................................................... 515 M. J. Pereira, P. Resende, U. M. Azeiteiro, J. Oliveira, D. R. de Figueiredo Kinetic Study of the Release of Lead in a Mine-Impacted Tropical River ................................................ 523 F. Arcega-Cabrera, S. E. Castillo-Blum, M. A. Armienta Contamination of the Water Environment in Malaria Endemic Areas of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, by Agricultural Insecticides ....................................................................................................................... 530 B. L. Sereda and H. R. Meinhardt Contamination of the Water Environment in Malaria Endemic Areas of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa by DDT and Its Metabolites ...................................................................................................................... 538 B. L. Sereda and H. R. Meinhardt Distribution of Semivolatile Cyclic Compounds in Sediment from Niigata, Japan.................................... 546 K. Kawata, A. Tanabe, T. Asada, K. Oikawa DDT, DDD, and DDE in Abiotic Media and Near-Shore Marine Biota from Sand Island, Midway Atoll, North Pacific Ocean......................................................................................................................... 554 B. K. Hope and S. Scatolini Levels of Organochlorine Compounds in Bivalves from the Japanese Coastal Waters: Results from the Environmental Specimen Bank in Japan............................................................................................ 561 Y. Takazawa, A. Tanaka, Y. Shibata, M. Morita Metabolism of Fenazaquin, an Acaricide in Tea Plant ............................................................................. 569 J. Bhattacharyya, H. Banerjee, S. P. Das, A. Bhattacharyya Absence of Free-Cylindrospermopsin Bioconcentration in Water Thyme (Hydrilla verticillata) ............... 574 S. H. White, L. J. Duivenvoorden, L. D. Fabbro Mercury Accumulation and Distribution in Medaka after the Exposure to Sublethal Levels of Methylmercury .......................................................................................................................................... 584 C.-Y. Liao, Q.-F. Zhou, J.-B. Shi, J.-J. Fu, G.-B. Jiang Metal Concentrations in Estuarine Invertebrates in Relation to Sediments ............................................. 592 R. Villares, E. Carral, X. M. Puente, A. Carballeira Impact of Change in Fuel Quality on PM10 in Delhi................................................................................. 600 A. B. Chelani and S. Devotta Ambient Respirable Particulate Matter and Toxic Metals in Kolkata City................................................. 608 D. G. Gajghate, P. R. Thawale, M. V. Vaidya, P. Nema Erratum Methods to Estimate Losses in Preemergence Herbicide Sprays ........................................................... 615 A. G. F. Costa, C. G. Raetano, E. D. Velini, G. R. Tofoli, A. L. Cavenaghi, E. Negrisoli Erratum Bromate Residues in Some Popular Baked Products in Relation to the Sustained Antibromate Campaign in Nigeria ................................................................................................................................. 616 N. P. Okolie, M. E. Ukhun, E. O. Onyema BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 76, No. 1, January 2006. Geostatistical Analysis for Hydrogeochemical Characterization of the Han River, Korea: Identification of Major Factors Governing Water Chemistry......................................................................... 1 J.-S. Ryu, K.-S. Lee, J.-H. Kim, K.-H. Ahn, H.-W. Chang Tolerable Level of Lifetime Cadmium Intake Estimated as a Benchmark Dose Low, Based on Excretion of ;2-Microglobulin in the Cadmium-Polluted Regions of the Kakehashi River Basin, Japan ...... 8

Page 13: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

13

E. Kobayashi, Y. Suwazono, M. Uetani, T. Kido, M. Nishijo, H. Nakagawa, K. Nogawa Relationship Between Dietary Cadmium Absorption by Grass Shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) and Trophically Available Cadmium in Amphipod (Gammarus lawrencianus) Prey ......................................... 16 D. R. Seebaugh, A. Estephan, W. G. Wallace Determination of in Vitro Biotoxicity in Exhaust Particulate Matter from Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine .24 - 32) C. L. Song, R. J. Huang, Y. Q. Wang, K. M. Liu, S. R. Dong, S. G. Dai Aftermath of the Long-Term Application of Sludge and Water from a Sewage Treatment Plant to a Lemon Tree (Citrus limon) Plantation......................................................................................................... 33 J. Menti, M. Roulia, E. Tsadilas, N. S. Christodoulakis Impact of 1,4-Dioxane from Domestic Effluent on the Agano and Shinano Rivers, Japan........................ 44 A. Tanabe, Y. Tsuchida, T. Ibaraki, K. Kawata Toxicity to Daphnia magna, Hyalella azteca, Oncorhynchus kisutch, Oncorhynchus mykiss, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, and Rana catesbeiana of Atrazine, Metolachlor, Simazine, and Their Formulated Products .................................................................................................................................. 52 M. T. Wan, C. Buday, G. Schroeder, J. Kuo, J. Pasternak Acute Toxicity of the Synthetic Pyrethroid Deltamethrin to Fingerling European Catfish, Silurus glanis L........................................................................................................................................................ 59 S. S. Köprücü, K. Köprücü, M. S. Ural Toxicity of Sediment from a Mining Spill to Cylindrotheca closterium (Ehremberg) Lewin and Reimann (Bacillariophyceae)...................................................................................................................... 66 I. Moreno-Garrido, N. Robveille, I. Riba, T. A. DelValls Comparative Sensitivity of Freshwater Algae to Atrazine .......................................................................... 73 C. K. Lockert, K. D. Hoagland, B. D. Siegfried Pilot Study of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Surface Soils of Guiyang City, People's Republic of China....................................................................................................................................................... 80 J. Hu, G. Zhang, C.-Q. Lui Treatment of Polluted River Water Using Pilot-Scale Constructed Wetlands ............................................ 90 X. Ruan, Y. Xue, J. Wu, L. Ni, M. Sun, X. Zhang Preparation and Performance of Inorganic Coagulant for Landfill Leachate Pretreatment ....................... 98 Q.-B. Gu, S.-S. Liu, X.-N. Zhuang, X.-J. Li, F.-S. Li Photochemical Transformation of Bisphenol A Promoted by Nitrate Ions ............................................... 105 M. J. Zhan, X. Yang, Q. M. Xian, L. R. Kong Bisphenol A in the Surface Water and Freshwater Snail Collected from Rivers Around a Secure Landfill....................................................................................................................................................... 113 J. H. Kang and F. Kondo Use Patterns and Residue Levels of Pesticides on Mukunuwenna, a Leafy Vegetable Grown in Sri Lanka ........................................................................................................................................................ 119 G. K. Hemakanthi de Alwis, R. D. Wijesekera, T. A. D. N. A. K. Jayasekera Abamectin in Tea and Tea Liquor Under Northeastern Indian Climatic Conditions................................. 126 R. Pal, N. Sanyal, P. Das, S. K. Pramanik, C. Das, A. Bhattacharyya, A. Chowdhury Bioaccumulation of Heavy Metals, Organochlorine Pesticides, and Detoxication Biochemical Indexes in Tissues of Ictalurus melas of Lake Trasimeno........................................................................ 132 A. C. Elia, R. Galarini, A. J. M. Dörr, M. I. Taticchi Ecochemical Approach Using Mercury Accumulation of Antarctic Minke Whale, Balaenoptera bonaerensis, as Tracer of Historical Change of Antarctic Marine Ecosystem During 1980—1999 ......... 140 K. Honda, M. Aoki, Y. Fujise Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers and Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Different Tissue Types from Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)........................................................................................ 148 D. Stone Organotin Compounds in the Three Gorges Reservoir Region of the Yangtze River.............................. 155 J.-M. Gao, J.-Y. Hu, H. Zhen, M. Yang, B.-Z. Li

Page 14: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

14

Heavy Metal Accumulation of Edible Vegetables Cultivated in Agricultural Soil in the Suburb of Zhengzhou City, People's Republic of China ........................................................................................... 163 W.-X. Lui, H.-H. Li, S.R. Li, Y.-W. Wang On the Adsorption Mechanisms of Copper Ions over Modified Biomass ................................................. 171 S. Montes, G. Montes-Atenas, F. Salomo, E. Valero, O. Diaz Adsorption of Cu2+ on Montmorillonite as Affected by 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid (2,4-D) ............ 179 F. Qin and Q. Shan BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 76, No. 3, March 2006. Toxicity of Dimethoate on Primary Productivity of a Lentic Aquatic Ecosystem: A Microcosm Approach................................................................................................................................................... 373 R. H. Ratageri, T. C. Taranath, H. C. Lakshman Immunoassay Method for the Determination of Pentachlorophenol in Soil and Sediment...................... 381 J. C. Chuang, J. M. Van Emon, J. K. Finegold, Y. L. Chou, F. Rubio Personal Airborne Asbestos Exposure Levels Associated with Various Types of Abatement................. 389 J. H. Lange, K. W. Thomulka, S. L. M. Sites, G. Priolo, G. Mastrangelo Effects of Microbial and Phosphate Amendments on the Bioavailability of Lead (Pb) in Shooting Range Soil ................................................................................................................................................ 392 C. Wilson, R. L. Brigmon, A. Knox, J. Seaman, G. Smith Persistence and Transformation of Thiamethoxam, a Neonicotinoid Insecticide, in Soil of Different Agroclimatic Zones of India ...................................................................................................................... 400 R. Karmakar, S. B. Singh, G. Kulshrestha Persistence and Dissipation of Linuron (Afalon-50wp) in Pea Cropped Soil and Its Effect on Soil Microorganisms......................................................................................................................................... 407 P. Mukherjee, S. Alam, D. Sardar, A. Pahari, S. Roy, A. Chowdhury Dissipation of Organophosphorus Pesticides in Green Onion (Allium fistulosum L), Cultivated in Forced System Called “Barbacoas”.......................................................................................................... 415 G. Ettiene, S. Ortega, J. Sepúlveda, D. Medina, I. Buscema, L. Sandoval Organochlorine Pesticide (HCH and DDT) Residues in Dietary Products from Shaanxi Province, People's Republic of China....................................................................................................................... 422 Y. Bai, L. Zhou, J. Li Estimation of Organochlorine Pesticide Residues in Two Popular Spices Extensively Used as Herbal Tea Ingredients in India................................................................................................................. 429 V. Naithani and P. Kakkar Trace Metal Content of Snacks and Appetizers Consumed in Turkey..................................................... 436 M. Soylak, H. Colak, O. Turkoglu, M. Dogan Distribution and Source of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) on Dust Collected in Shanghai, People's Republic of China ..................................................................................................... 442 Y. Ren, Q. Zhang, J. Chen Speciation of Particle-Associated Resin Acids and Chromophoric Compounds in Water Samples from the Biological Treatment System of Two New Zealand Pulp Mills.........................................450 - 457) S. A. Kanber, A. G. Langdon, A. L. Wilkins Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene, and Isomeric Xylenes in Various Watr Samples in Croatia.....458 - 462) B. Karaconji, L. Skender, V. Karacic Pesticide Residues in Rawal Lake, Islamabad, Pakistan......................................................................... 463 K. Ahad, A. Mohammad, F. Mehboob, A. Sattar, I. Ahmad Leaching Behavior and Flux of Toxic Metals from Chromated Copper Arsenate-Treated Wood and Chromated Copper Arsenate-Treated Wood Ash .................................................................................... 471 Y.-C. Jang, H. Yoon, H. Kang

Page 15: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

15

Degradation of Low and High Molecular Weight Fractions of Softwood Bleachery Effluents by Penicillium camemberti in Up-flow Column Reactor.......................................................................481 - 489) B. K. Taseli and C. F. Gökçay Evaluation of Surface Water Pollution with Atrazine, an Endocrine Disruptor Chemical, in Agricultural Areas of Turopolje, Croatia.................................................................................................... 490 T. Gojmerac, Z. Ostojic, D. Paukovic, J. Pleadin, M. Žuric Accumulation of PCBs and Organochlorine Pesticides in River-Caught European River Lamprey (Lampetra fluviatillis) in Finland ......................................................................................................497 - 504) L. Merivirta, M. Kivisaari, S. Berg, K. Peltonen, J. Björkroth, H. Korkeala Effects of the Water Soluble Fraction of Diesel Fuel Oil on Some Functional Parameters of the Neotropical Freshwater Fish Prochilodus Lineatus Valenciennes ........................................................... 505 J. D. Simonato, A. C. Albinati, C. B. R. Martinez Chromium Toxicity to Euglena gracilis Strains Depending on the Physiocochemical Properties of the Culture Medium......................................................................................................................................... 512 I. Rocchetta, L. B. Ruiz, M. C. Rios de Molina, V. Conforti Copper Kinetics and Hepatic Glutathione Levels in the Copper Exposed Frog Rana ridibunda after Tetrathiomolybdate Treatment.................................................................................................................. 522 N. S. Loumbourdis Accumulation of Cadmium and Lead in Cerastoderma glaucum Originating from the Gulf of Gabès, Tunisia ............................................................................................................................................529 - 537) M. Machreki-Ajmi and A. Hamza-Chaffai Absorption of Zinc and Lead by Dittrichia viscosa Grown in a Contaminated Soil Amended with Olive-Derived Wastes .....................................................................................................................538 - 544) R. Nogales and E. Benítez Preexposure to Copper Modulates Nonenzymatic Antioxidants in Liver of Channa punctata (Bloch) Exposed to the Herbicide Paraquat .......................................................................................................... 545 S. Parvez and S. Raisuddin Impact of Age of Immature Dendrobaena octaedra (Sav.), (Lumbricidae: Oligochaeta) at Cadmium Application on Life History Response....................................................................................................... 552 A. Rozen BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY: Vol. 76, No. 4, April 2006. Biological Monitoring of Environmental Exposure to Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons: 1-Hydroxypyrene in Urine of Turkish Coke Oven Workers.......................................................................... 559 M. Yilmazer, A. O. Ada, S. Suzen, C. Demiroglu, A. E. Demirbag, S. Efe, Y. Alemdar, M. Iscan, S. Burgaz Small Heat Shock Protein 20 Gene (Hsp20) of the Intertidal Copepod Tigriopus japonicus as a Possible Biomarker for Exposure to Endocrine Disruptors ...................................................................... 566 J. S. Seo, T.-J. Park, Y.-M. Lee, H. G. Park, Y.-D. Yoon, J.-S. Lee Flow Cytometric Analysis of DNA Damage in Cotton Rats, Sigmodon hispidus, Inhabiting an Abandoned Colliery Strip Mine ................................................................................................................. 573 M. A. Harrington, K. A. Hays, K. McBee Imposex Induction in the Mud Snail, Ilyanassa obsoleta by Three Tin Compounds................................ 581 P. McClellan-Green, J. Romano, D. Rittschof Effect of Zinc Addition to Soil on Nematode Community Structure.......................................................... 589 X. K. Zhang, Q. Li, S. B. Wang, Y. Jiang, W. Liang Relationships Among Metallothionein, Cadmium Accumulation, and Cadmium Tolerance in Three Species of Fish ......................................................................................................................................... 595 S. M. Wu, K. J. Jong, Y. J. Lee

Page 16: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

16

Effect of 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene and 2,4-Dinitrotoluene on the Growth Rate and Photosynthetic Capacity of the Cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa (Kützing) Lemmermann........................601 - 606) E. Bañares-España, L. García-Villada, V. López-Rodas, E. Costas, A. Flores-Moya Effect of Monocrotophos on Erythropoietic Activity and Hematological Parameters of the Freshwater Fish Channa punctatus (Bloch) ................................................................................................................ 607 S. Agrahari, K. C. Pandey, K. Gopal Toxicity of Three Mosquito Insecticides to Crayfish ................................................................................. 614 E. A. Paul and H. A. Simonin Acute Toxicity of Endosulfan to the Milkfish, Chanos chanos, of the Southeast Coast of India .............. 622 S. Magesh and A. K. Kumaraguru Sediment Toxicity Tests Using Two Species of Marine Amphipods: Gammarus aequicauda and Corophium insidiosum .............................................................................................................................. 629 E. Prato, A. Di Leo, F. Biandolino, N. Cardellicchio Radionuclides in Honeybee Propolis (Apis mellifera L.)........................................................................... 637 R. O. Orsi, S. R. C. Funari, R. Barbattini, C. Giovani, F. Frilli, J. M. Sforcin, V. Bankova Evaluation of Toxic Equivalent Quantity of Dioxins in Human Milk Using Different Toxicity Equivalence Factors ................................................................................................................................. 641 K. Saito, A. Ohmura, M. Takekuma, M. Fukui, Y. Iwasaki, R. Ito, Y. Matsuki, H. Nakazawa Mercury in Feathers of Nestling Eagle Owls, Bubo bubo L., and Muscle of their Main Prey Species in Toledo Province, Central Spain ............................................................................................................ 648 J. Ortego, M. Jiménez, M. Díaz, R. C. Rodríguez Distribution of Metals in Representative Biota of Sundarban Mangrove Wetland, Northeast India......... 656 M. Saha, A. Cobelo-Garcia, S. K. Sarkar, R. Prego, B. Bhattacharya Leaching of Copper from an Industrial Sludge Applied on a Soil Column .....................................663 - 670) J. Xu, S. Dai, X. Han, S. Sun, P. Zhang Environmental Pollution and Health Risk Related to Metals in the Solid Fraction and Effluent from Waste Water Treatment............................................................................................................................ 671 N. Sasáková, M. Vargová, O. Ondrašovicová, M. Ondrašovic, J. Kottferová, M. Skalická Distribution of Arsenic in Three Geochemical Fractions of Surface Sediments from Coastal Sites of Sonora, Gulf of California, Mexico............................................................................................................ 677 M. E. Jara-Marini and L. García-Rico Zinc in Cattle from Area Polluted by Long-Term Emissions..................................................................... 684 B. Koréneková, M. Skalická, P. Nad’ Environmental Stability of PAH Source Indices in Pyrogenic Tars........................................................... 689 A. D. Uhler and S. D. Emsbo-Mattingly DDT Concentrations in Soils of Brazzaville, Congo ................................................................................. 697 B. Ngabe and T. F. Bidleman Organochlorine Pesticides and PCB Congeners in Human Milk from Two Population Groups in Croatia ...................................................................................................................................................... 705 S.Herceg Romanic and B. Krauthacker Effects of Temperature and Microorganisms on Malathion Transformation in River Water..................... 712 Y. Zheng and H.-M. Hwang Adsorption and Degradation of Benfuracarb in Three Soils in Hunan, People's Republic of China ........ 720 N. Xue, R. Yang, X. Xu, H. M. Seip, Q. Zang Relationship Between Atmospheric Quality and Concentration of Nitrite in Condensed Water of Dehumidifier.............................................................................................................................................. 728 X. J. Wang, Y. G. Zhan, G. P. Hu, X. F. Cui Uptake of Cadmium by Different Cultivars of Brassica pekinens (Lour.) Rupr. and Brassica chinensis L. and Their Potential for Phytoremediation ............................................................................. 732 C. P. Liu, Z. G. Shen, X. D. Li Oxidative Remediation of Diphenylamine in Wastewater......................................................................... 740 I. S. Jamall and I. Brown

Page 17: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

17

CIENCIAS DEL MAR, U.A.S.: Vol. 17, 2004. Rigoberto Beltrán Álvarez, Jesús Sánchez Palacios y Juan Pedro Ramírez Lozano. Los carideos del río Elota, Sinaloa, México ....................................................................................................................... 1 Aida Caridad Hernández Zanuy. Distribución y abundancia de ascidias en dos bahías del norte de Cuba, sometidas a diferente grado de transformación antrópica.................................... 7 F.J .Estacio, J.E .Sánchez Moyano, E.M. García Adiego, J.L.Carballo y J.C. García Gómez. Influenciadelas condiciones ambientales sobre la macrofauna bentónica del sedimento en una bahía del sur de España. 1. Distribución espacial y análisis ecológico de las comunidades .................... 13 F. J. Estacio, E. M. Garcia Adiego, J. E. Sánebez Moyano, R. Fernández Nespral, E. Briones, D. Fa y J. C. Garcia Gómez. Influencia de algunos factores ambientales en la distribución de las comunidades macrobentónicas del estuario del río Palmones (sur de España). ...................................... 23 Carmen Valadez González. Dieta de algunos rajiformes en la costa de Jalisco y Colima, México .......... 33 Armando A. Ortega Salas y Hugo Reyes Bustamente. Crecimiento de lajaiba Callinectes arcuatus Ordway (1 863) y el camarón Litopenaeus vannamei (Bonne, 1931) en un estanque rústico .................. 39 Rafael Solís Ibarra y Juan Manuel Audelo Naranjo. Estructura poblacional de Diapterus peruvianus (Couvier y Valenciennes, 1830) en la pesca artesanal costera de Mazatlán, Sinaloa (Perciformes, Gerreidae)................................................................................................................................................... 45 Armando A. Ortega Salas y Hugo Reyes Bustamente. Muda de lajaiba Callinectes arcuatus Ordway (1863) bajo condiciones de estanque rústico y de Laboratorio................................................................. 51 Armando A. Ortega Salas y Hugo Reyes Bustamente. Cultivo de la trucha arco iris, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum, 1792) enjaulas flotantes .................................................. 57 Ramón Peraza Vizcarra. Aplicación de curvas de recambio en el manejo de cuerpos de agua costeros ...................................................................................................................................................... 63 NOTAS CIENTÍFICAS / SCIENTIFIC NOTES Rafael Solís Ibarra y Juan de Dios Mendoza López. Aspectos alimentarios de Cynoscion reticulatus (Gunther, 1864) e Isopisthus remifer (Jordan y Gilbert, 1881) en la fauna de acompañamiento del camarón (Pises, Scianidae)........................................................................................................................ 67 DIVULGACIÓN / DIVULGATION Ramón Peraza Vizcarra. Medición de perfiles de playa utilizando dos reglas de madera ...................... 69 CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE: No. 506, 8 June, 2006. SHUMWAY RUIN AND THE LATE PRE-HISPANIC PERIOD IN EAST-CENTRAL ARIZONA SCOTT VAN KEUREN CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE: No. 507, 8 June, 2006. REVISION OF THE MELALONCHA UNGULATA- GROUP OF BEE-KILLING FLIES (DIPTERA: PHORIDAE) BRIAN V. BROWN AND GIAR-ANN KUNG CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE: No. 508, 8 June, 2006. A SYNOPSIS OF THE GENERA MNESARETE COWLEY, BRYOPLATHANON GEN. NOV., AND ORMENOPLEBIA GEN. NOV. (ODONATA: CALOPTERYGIDAE) ROSSER W. GARRISON COPEIA: No. 2, May 26, 2006.

Page 18: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

18

A New Miniature Horned Crocodile from the Quaternary of Aldabra Atoll, Western Indian Ocean Christopher A. Brochu .............................................................................................................................. 149 The Enigmatic Decline of Blanchard's Cricket Frog (Acris crepitans blanchardi): A Test of the Habitat Acidification Hypothesis Richard M. Lehtinen, Allen A. Skinner...................................................................................................... 159 The Catfish Genus Tetranematichthys (auchenipteridae) Richard P. Vari, Carl J. Ferraris Jr............................................................................................................ 168 Fixed Videography to Study Predation Behavior of an Ambush Foraging Snake, Crotalus Horridus Rulon W. Clark.......................................................................................................................................... 181 Tadpole Mouthpart Depigmentation as an Accurate Indicator of Chytridiomycosis, an Emerging Disease of Amphibians Roland A. Knapp, Jess A.T. Morgan ........................................................................................................ 188 The Genus Henonemus (siluriformes: Trichomycteridae) with a Description of a New Species from Venezuela Carlos DoNascimiento, Francisco Provenzano ........................................................................................ 198 First Report of a Pectoral Girdle Muscle in Snakes, with Comments on the Snake Cervico-dorsal Boundary Takanobu Tsuihiji, Maureen Kearney, Olivier Rieppel ............................................................................. 206 Locomotor Performance and Sexual Selection: Individual Variation in Sprint Speed of Collared Lizards (Crotaphytus Collaris) Charles C. Peterson, Jerry F. Husak ........................................................................................................ 216 A New Species of Giant Seven-gilled Hagfish (Myxinidae: Eptatretus) From New Zealand Michael M Mincarone, Andrew L. Stewart ................................................................................................ 225 New Western Indian Ocean Tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae, Symphurus) Thomas A. Munroe ................................................................................................................................... 230 Redescription and Holotype Clarification Of Paralichthys Orbignyanus (Valenciennes, 1839) (pleuronectiformes: Paralichthyidae) Juan M. Díaz de Astarloa, Thomas A. Munroe, Martine Desoutter.......................................................... 235 New Species of Aphanius (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae) from Isfahan Province of Iran and a Reanalysis of Other Iranian Species Tomas Hrbek, Yazdan Keivany, Brian W. Coad....................................................................................... 244 SHORTER CONTRIBUTIONS The First Karyotypic Report of the Genus Caudacaecilia with Comments on its Generic Validity (Amphibia, Gymnophiona, Ichthyophiidae) Masafumi Matsui, Kanto Nishikawa, Ahmad Sudin, Maryati Mohamed................................................... 256 A Morphometric Comparison of Island and Mainland Boas (Boa Constrictor) in Belize Scott M. Boback........................................................................................................................................ 261 Zebra and Quagga Mussels (Dreissena spp.) and Other Prey of a Lake Erie Population of Common Map Turtles (Emydidae: Graptemys Geographica) Peter V. Lindeman .................................................................................................................................... 268 Predation by an Exotic Crayfish, Procambarus Clarkii, on Natterjack Toad, Bufo Calamita, Embryos: Its Role on the Exclusion of this Amphibian from its Breeding Ponds Maria J Cruz, Sandra Pascoal, Miguel Tejedo, Rui Rebelo ..................................................................... 274 Sex Differences in Longevity in the Spotted Turtle (Clemmys guttata) Jacqueline D. Litzgus................................................................................................................................ 281 An Investigation of the Utility of Feeding Angles Among Lake Malawi Rock-dwelling Cichlids (Teleostei: Cichlidae) Jay R. Stauffer Jr, Isa Posner................................................................................................................... 289 Ecological Characteristics of the Skink, Mabuya Longicaudata, on a Tropical East Asian Island Wen-san Huang........................................................................................................................................ 293 Bite-Force Performance Predicts Dominance in Male Venerable Collared Lizards (Crotaphytus antiquus)

Page 19: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

19

Jerry F. Husak, A. Kristopher Lappin, Stanley F. Fox, Julio A. Lemos-Espinal ....................................... 301 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES WILLIAM BEVERLEY SCOTT David G. Smith.......................................................................................................................................... 307 ERNEST ANTHONY LINER Joseph C. Mitchell .................................................................................................................................... 316 BOOK REVIEWS Fishes of Alabama David A. Etnier .......................................................................................................................................... 321 REEF AND SHORE FISHES OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC: NEW CALEDONIA TO TAHITI AND THE PITCAIRN ISLANDS David W. Greenfield.................................................................................................................................. 322 STUDY OF THE DORSAL GILL-ARCH MUSCULATURE OF TELEOSTOME FISHES, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE ACTINOPTERYGII Ralf Britz ................................................................................................................................................... 323 EDITORIAL NOTES AND NEWS Editorial Notes and News ......................................................................................................................... 331 CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS: Vol. 84, No. 22, May 29, 2006. News of the WeekSPOT Grabs, Tags Carbohydrates Technique could ease sequencing and analysis of biological sugar chains. Changing The Rules For Academics Labs Universities would get a break from current requirements aimed at industry. BASF Ups Bid For Engelhard Again As Engelhard's annual meeting approaches, BASF makes its 'best and final offer'. Proceed With Care High doses of some short hairpin RNAs cause liver toxicity and death in mice. Green Chemistry CO2-Based Dry-Cleaning Chain Launched In Germany. Nobel Laureate R. Bruce Merrifield Dies At 84 Rockefeller University biochemist 'revolutionized' peptide synthesis. Faulty Filters Firm indicted for making faulty air filters for chemical, biological, and nuclear agents for military tanks. Plant Security Study calls for funding R&D on inherently safer chemicals and processes, safer storage. Sunlight Controls Polymer Growth Novel living polymerization technique relies on photoexcitation of metal-containing monomers. World Health Gates Foundation, Novartis embark on public-private ventures to combat TB and malaria. Business (Subscriber Content)Business Concentrates Upbeat In Orlando Software giant SAP racks up kudos at its Sapphire users conference. Preventing Malaria Insecticide-treated nets are playing an important role in fighting malaria in Africa, Southeast Asia. Government & Policy (Subscriber Content)Government & Policy Concentrates Parsing The Meanings Of WMD Analyst argues the term 'weapons of mass destruction' should mean nuclear, biological, and chemical arms. International Science

Page 20: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

20

Board gathers input on improving effective scientific partnerships between U.S. and non-U.S. scientists. EPA's Research Needs: Looking Forward Former EPA research chiefs examine the challenges facing agency's science programs. Science & Technology (Subscriber Content) Science & Technology Concentrates Fixing Phosphorus Niobium complex allows MIT chemists to build compounds from elemental phosphorus. The Power Of Procrastination Caltech instructor and his comic strip champion a rethinking of the merits of putting things off. Digital Briefs New Software and Websites for the Chemical Enterprise. BooksPutt's World Book delves into how high-tech organizations often function by creating logic from confusion. C is for Carbon ACS NewsOfficial Reports Committees report on their business at the ACS national meeting in Atlanta. MeetingsCalendars And Events The DepartmentsLetters People Newscripts Vol. 84, No. 23, June 5, 2006. News of the Week Poison Ivy Could Get Worse Plants grown under elevated CO2 levels pack a more allergenic punch. Engelhard Agrees To BASF Takeover Catalyst and pigment maker capitulates after four months of resisting buyout. Unions Seek Tougher Pesticide Rules Letter to EPA administrator claims political pressure on agency scientists. Enzyme Redesigned Computationally Calculated structural change modifies enzyme's DNA-cleaving selectivity. R&D In China AstraZeneca's Innovation Centre China anchors firm's three-year, $100 million R&D investment. Particle Size Matters Aerosol particle size, not chemical composition, has the greatest influence on cloud formation. Butadiene Bonds Combination of theory and experiment confirms the influence of delocalization on structure. Major Grant For Science Education Howard Hughes Medical Institute provides $86 million for undergraduate instruction. Glaxo Will Cut AIDS Drug Prices For Poor Nations Drugmaker also signs licensing agreement to allow South African firm to make generic versions of two medicines. Business (Subscriber Content)Business Concentrates Reaching India's Labs Suppliers of research chemicals struggle to speed up deliveries to their growing customers in India. Building Alliances U.K. conference spotlights new ways for pharmaceutical companies to partner their way to success. Cosmetic Appeal More chemical companies see personal care as an outlet for their products and technologies. Extreme Takeover The nationalization of oil and gas resources in Latin America will eventually backfire. Government & Policy (Subscriber Content)Government & Policy Concentrates

Page 21: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

21

Guidelines For Assessing Risk White House proposal could impede broad range of government activities, agency representatives warn. Hydrogen Fuel Incentive Advances On Capitol Hill H-Prize would provide reward for scientists who develop an affordable hydrogen vehicle. Science & Technology (Subscriber Content)Science & Technology Concentrates Making Fuels Synthetically Fundamental advances in Fischer-Tropsch chemistry may boost method's efficiency and popularity. Quinone Ligand Ups Ante For Rhodium Novel complexes expand role of premier catalyst metal, including applications in materials science. In Pursuit of Synthetic EPO Complex erythropoietin-like glycopeptides are made from scratch. Editor's PageTake A Stand The DepartmentsLetters Newscripts CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS: Vol. 84, No. 24, June 12, 2006. News of the Week Whitesides Named Priestley Medalist Harvard professor is honored for lifetime of achievements and service to chemistry. Degussa Goes East German firm sells North American plant, forms joint venture in China. Industry Backs Asbestos Fund Manufacturers support Senate bill to end litigation over compensation. Amide With A Twist The archetypal bicyclic twisted amide 2-quinuclidone is finally synthesized. Formosa Plastics Legendary founder and chairman of Taiwan's Formosa Plastics Group steps down. Pharma's Comeback Targeted small-molecule therapies rule at major meeting of oncologists. A Sense Of Touch Nanoparticle-based thin-film device could help robots sense texture. Zeroing In On Active Catalytic Sites Method reveals mechanistic details of chemical reactions on surfaces. ACS Honors Heininger, Hoffman Selected For ACS Service Awards; CAS To Be Chemical Landmark. ADVERTISEMENT Business (Subscriber Content)Business Concentrates Lure Of Biologics Once kept at arm's length, biotechnology is being embraced by big pharma. Patents Go To Gavel Ocean Tomo's live auction of intellectual assets intrigues chemical companies. Polyethylene In The Sand France's Total is one of several Western chemical firms seeking to exploit Qatar's natural gas resources. Government & Policy (Subscriber Content)Government & Policy Concentrates A Harder Look At Efficiency DOE's industrial energy-auditing program could cut energy use significantly, but its survival is unsure. Congress Tackles Education Issues

Page 22: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

22

Legislation focuses on K-12, undergraduate science education to keep U.S. economically competitive. Science & Technology (Subscriber Content)Science & Technology Concentrates Lithium Batteries With More Muscle Innovations in battery materials are leading to applications heftier than portable electronics. Raincoats Charles Macintosh's waterproof-fabric concept, patented more than 180 years ago, is still relevant. Inside Instrumentation Technology and Business News for the Laboratory World. Editor's PageProtecting Oceans And Coastlines ACS NewsStudents Dazzle At Intel Science Fair ACS Indiana Section members donate their time and talent as judges. The DepartmentsLetters Newscripts Vol. 84, No. 25, June 19, 2006. Web Feature The Human Face Of Pharma Seventeen individuals whose lives depend on, or whose livelihoods are affected by, the pharmaceutical industry offer unique perspectives on what pharma's future should be. News of the WeekTriple Cascade Asymmetric reaction constructs three new C-C bonds and four stereocenters. Georgia Gulf Will Buy Royal Group Deal will create a large, back-integrated vinyl products supplier. Greener Cleaners EPA initiative urging phaseout of NPE surfactants receives mixed reviews. Aging Cells Get New Lease On Life Small molecule is found to extend lifetime of mammalian cells. Schering Shares Merck's threat to derail Bayer's acquisition of Schering is resolved. Herzenberg Nabs Kyoto Prize Award honors the developer of the fluorescence-activated cell sorter. FDA Combats Counterfeit Drugs Agency will require wholesalers to track drugs throughout the supply chain. ADVERTISEMENT Business (Subscriber Content)Business Concentrates Government & Policy (Subscriber Content)Government & Policy Concentrates Science & Technology (Subscriber Content)Science & Technology Concentrates Editor's PageFocus On Pharma The DepartmentsLetters Newscripts CRUSTACEANA: Vol. 78, Part 11, December 2005. Tethys Sea fragmentation and speciation of Panulirus spiny lobsters ................................................... 1281 George, R.W. Application of RFLP analysis to identify cyst populations of Artemia urmiana Günther, 1899 (Branchiopoda, Anostraca) from Urmia Lake, Iran................................................................................. 1311 Eimanifar, Amin; Rezvani, Sohrab; Carapetian, Jirair Larval stage composition and morphological change during larval development of the Japanese mantis shrimp, Oratosquilla oratoria (De Haan, 1844) (Stomatopoda, Squillidae) in Tokyo Bay, Japan ...................................................................................................................................................... 1325 Ohtomi, Jun; Kawazoe, Hironori; Furota, Toshio

Page 23: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

23

Danielopolina (Ostracoda, Thaumatocyprididae) on Christmas Island, Indian Ocean, a sea mount island....................................................................................................................................................... 1339 Humphreys, W.F.; Danielopol, D.L. The taxa of the infraorders Astacidea, Thalassinidea, Palinura, and Anomura (Decapoda, Pleocyemata) classified by the form of the prepyloric ossicle ................................................................ 1353 Sakai, Katsushi; Sawada, Takuya A new bomolochid copepod parasitic on marine fishes of Taiwan, with reassignment of species of Holobomolochus Vervoort, 1969 ............................................................................................................ 1369 Ho, Ju-Shey; Lin, Ching-Long Notes and News Evaluation of internal elastomer tags for small, mature crabs................................................................ 1383 Spilseth, S.A.; Morgan, S.G. Coexistence of two North American invasive crayfish species, Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852) and Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852) in Japan......................................................................... 1389 Nakata, Kazuyoshi; Tsutsumi, Kimihiro; Kawai, Tadashi; Goshima, Seiji Euphausiid larvae in the ballast waters of commercial ships: evidence for a possibility for biological invasion................................................................................................................................................... 1395 Timofeev, S.F.; Selifonova, Z.h.P. Enigmatic pores in females of Dikerogammarus villosus (Sowinsky, 1894) (Amphipoda). Amphipod Pilot Species Project (AMPIS) Report 1 ................................................................................................. 1399 Platvoet, Dirk; Hou, Zhong-E; Li, Shuqiang; van der Velde, Gerard ...................................................... 1405 DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Vol. 12, No. 3, May 2006. Special Feature: Linking the concept of scale to studies of biological diversity Linking the concept of scale to studies of biological diversity: evolving approaches and tools Erik A. Beever, Robert K. Swihart, Brandon T. Bestelmeyer ................................................................... 229 Patterns of spatial autocorrelation of assemblages of birds, floristics, physiognomy, and primary productivity in the central Great Basin, USA Erica Fleishman, Ralph Mac Nally............................................................................................................ 236 Effects of scale on interpreting life-history characteristics of ungulates and carnivores R. Terry Bowyer, John G. Kie ................................................................................................................... 244 Multiscale responses of soil stability and invasive plants to removal of non-native grazers from an arid conservation reserve Erik A. Beever, Manuela Huso, David A. Pyke......................................................................................... 258 Scale for resource selection functions Mark S. Boyce........................................................................................................................................... 269 The roles of landscape context, niche breadth, and range boundaries in predicting species responses to habitat alteration Robert K. Swihart, Jeffrey J. Lusk, Joseph E. Duchamp, Carol E. Rizkalla, Jeffrey E. Moore ................ 277 Accuracy of resource selection functions across spatial scales Carolyn B. Meyer, Wilfried Thuiller Biodiversity Research ............................................................................................................................... 288 Sub-alpine amphibian distributions related to species palatability to non-native salmonids in the Klamath mountains of northern California Hartwell H. Welsh Jr, Karen L. Pope, Daniel Boiano................................................................................ 298 Challenges in estimating past plant diversity from fossil pollen data: statistical assessment, problems, and possible solutions Chengyu Weng, Henry Hooghiemstra, Joost F. Duivenvoorden.............................................................. 310 Predicting invasions by woody species in a temperate zone: a test of three risk assessment schemes in the Czech Republic (Central Europe)

Page 24: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

24

Martin Krivánek, Petr Pyšek ..................................................................................................................... 319 Does saltwater flushing reduce viability of diapausing eggs in ship ballast sediment? Sarah A. Bailey, Kanavillil Nandakumar, Hugh J. MacIsaac .................................................................... 328 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY: Vol. 49, No. 3, January 2006. Time-lapse resistivity investigations for imaging saltwater transport in glaciofluvial deposits................ 347 - Virginie Leroux and Torleif Dahlin Soil and water pollution derived from anthropogenic activities in the Porsuk River Basin, Turkey........ 359 - Galip Yuce, Arzu Pinarbasi, Sakir Ozcelik, Didem Ugurluoglu Landfill site selection by using geographic information systems............................................................ 376 - Basak Sener, M. Lütfi Süzen, Vedat Doyuran Magnetic and ground probing radar measurements for soil pollution mapping in the industrial area of Val Basento (Basilicata Region, Southern Italy): a case study .......................................................... 389 - D. Chianese, M. D’Emilio, M. Bavusi, V. Lapenna, M. Macchiato Development of a framework of automated water quality parameter optimization and its application .. 405 - Kyung-Sub Kim and Chung-Hwan Je Seasonal variation of groundwater quality in a part of Guntur District, Andhra Pradesh, India ............. 413 - N. Subba Rao Application of hydrochemical signatures to delineating portable groundwater resources in Ordos Basin, China............................................................................................................................................ 430 - Yunfeng Li, Weifeng Wan, Yaoguo Wu, Hui Qu, Guangcai Hou Sequential extractions on mine tailings samples after and before bioassays: implications on the speciation of metals during microbial re-colonization............................................................................. 437 - J.V. García-Meza, A. Carrillo-Chávez, O. Morton-Bermea Impact of karst water on coal mining in North China.............................................................................. 449 - Gongyu Li and Wanfang Zhou Contrast of evolution models for agricultural contaminants in ground waters by means of fuzzy logic and data mining ...................................................................................................................................... 458 - J.M. Andujar, J. Aroba, M.L. la de Torre, J.A. Grande Failure and flow development of a collapse induced complex landslide: the 2005 Kuzulu (Koyulhisar, Turkey) landslide hazard .................................................................................................... 467 - Isik Yilmaz, Tülay Ekemen, Mustafa Yildirim, Inan Keskin, Gül Özdemir Hydrogeochemical evolution of groundwater in a Mediterranean coastal aquifer, Mersin-Erdemli basin (Turkey) ......................................................................................................................................... 477 - Zeynel Demirel and Cüneyt Güler Anne-Marie de Grosbois, Dale Easley, Fakhry A Assaad ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY: Vol. 49, No. 3, January 2006. Ammonium regeneration in intertidal sediments of the Yangtze estuary during air-exposure............... 937 - L.J. Hou, M. Liu, J.J. Lu, S.Y. Xu, D.N. Ou, Y. Yang, D.G. Zheng Change of groundwater chemistry from 1896 to present in the Mid-Levels area, Hong Kong .............. 946 - Chi-man Leung and Jiu Jimmy Jiao Assessment of sand encroachment in Kuwait using GIS....................................................................... 960 - Anwar B. Al-helal and Jasem M. Al-awadhi Neural network modeling for regional hazard assessment of debris flow in Lake Qionghai Watershed, China ................................................................................................................................... 968 - Y. Liu, H. C. Guo, R. Zou, L. J. Wang Effects of surfactants and electrolyte solutions on the properties of soil................................................ 977 -

Page 25: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

25

Junboum Park, Cumaraswamy Vipulanandan, Jee Woong Kim, Myoung Hak Oh Assessment of the groundwater potential and quality in Bhatsa and Kalu river basins of Thane district, western Deccan Volcanic Province of India ............................................................................... 990 - M.N. Ravi Shankar and G. Mohan Groundwater hydrochemistry of a sugarcane cultivation belt in parts of Muzaffarnagar district, Uttar Pradesh, India......................................................................................................................................... 999 - R. Umar, M. Muqtada A. Khan, A. Absar Delineation of arsenic-contaminated zones in Bengal Delta, India: a geographic information system and fractal approach ............................................................................................................................. 1009 - Basab Mukhopadhyay, P. K. Mukherjee, Debkumar Bhattacharya, S. Sengupta Predictive simulation of three exploitation schemes for the brines in the Bieletan section of the Charham Salt Lake, China.................................................................................................................... 1021 - Zhou Xun, Fang Bin, Chen Mingyou, Zhao Liang, Zhang Hua, Shen Ye A highlight of environmental and engineering geology in Fargo, North Dakota, USA.......................... 1034 - Fred J. Anderson Alteration, evaluation and use of extremaduran granite residues ........................................................ 1043 - C. Albarrán-Liso, M. M. Jordán-Vidal, T. Sanfeliu-Montolio, M. J. Liso-Rubio Spatial distribution of heavy metals in surficial sediments from Guanabara Bay: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ..................................................................................................................................................... 1051 - José Antônio Baptista Neto, Franz Xaver Gingele, Thomas Leipe, Isa Brehme Copper and zinc uptake by rice and accumulation in soil amended with municipal solid waste compost ................................................................................................................................................ 1064 - P. Bhattacharyya, A. Chakraborty, K. Chakrabarti, S. Tripathy, M.A. Powell 3D behaviour of contamination in landfill sites using 2D resistivity/IP imaging: case studies in Portugal................................................................................................................................................. 1071 - E. Martinho and F. Almeida ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 142, No. 1, July 2006. Urban environmental geochemistry of trace metals • REVIEW.............................................................. 1-16 Coby S.C. Wong, Xiangdong Li and Iain Thornton Assessment of heavy metal bioavailability in contaminated sediments and soils using green fluorescent protein-based bacterial biosensors •.................................................................................. 17-23 Vivian Hsiu-Chuan Liao, Ming-Te Chien, Yuen-Yi Tseng and Kun-Lin Ou Effects of oil sands tailings compounds and harsh weather on mortality rates, growth and detoxification efforts in nestling tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) • ................................................. 24-33 Marie-Line Gentes, Cheryl Waldner, Zsuzsanna Papp and Judit E.G. Smits Ectomycorrhizas impede phytoremediation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) both within and beyond the rhizosphere •............................................................................................................... 34-38 Erik J. Joner, Corinne Leyval and Jan V. Colpaert Characterization of trace organic contaminants in marine sediment from Yeongil Bay, Korea: 1. Instrumental analyses •......................................................................................................................... 39-47 Chul-Hwan Koh, Jong Seong Khim, Daniel L. Villeneuve, Kurunthachalam Kannan and John P. Giesy Characterization of trace organic contaminants in marine sediment from Yeongil Bay, Korea: 2. Dioxin-like and estrogenic activities • ................................................................................................... 48-57 Chul-Hwan Koh, Jong Seong Khim, Daniel L. Villeneuve, Kurunthachalam Kannan and John P. Giesy Effects of NO2 and NH3 from road traffic on epiphytic lichens • .......................................................... 58-64 L. Frati, E. Caprasecca, S. Santoni, C. Gaggi, A. Guttova, S. Gaudino, A. Pati, S. Rosamilia, S.A. Pirintsos and S. Loppi

Page 26: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

26

Genotoxicity biomarkers and acetylcholinesterase activity in natural populations of Mytilus galloprovincialis along a pollution gradient in the Gulf of Oristano (Sardinia, western Mediterranean) •............................................................................................................................................................. 65-72 P. Magni, G. De Falco, C. Falugi, M. Franzoni, M. Monteverde, E. Perrone, M. Sgro and C. Bolognesi Brachidontes variabilis and Patella sp. as quantitative biological indicators for cadmium, lead and mercury in the Lebanese coastal waters •............................................................................................ 73-82 Khaled F. Nakhlé, Daniel Cossa, Ghaby Khalaf and Benoit Beliaeff California sea lions (Zalophus californianus californianus) have lower chlorinated hydrocarbon contents in northern Baja California, México, than in California, USA • ............................................... 83-92 Ligeia Del Toro, Gisela Heckel, Víctor F. Camacho-Ibar and Yolanda Schramm Lead shot from hunting as a source of lead in human blood • ............................................................. 93-97 Poul Johansen, Henning Sloth Pedersen, Gert Asmund and Frank Riget Imposex occurrence in marine whelks at a military facility in the high Arctic •................................... 98-102 Jakob Strand, Christian M. Glahder and Gert Asmund Bioavailability and cellular effects of metals on Lumbricus terrestris inhabiting volcanic soils • ...... 103-108 André Amaral, Manu Soto, Regina Cunha, Ionan Marigómez and Armindo Rodrigues Growth and nutritive quality of Poa pratensis as influenced by ozone and competition • ................ 109-115 J. Bender, R.B. Muntifering, J.C. Lin and H.J. Weigel Effects of metals on condition and reproductive output of the smooth toadfish in Sydney estuaries, south-eastern Australia •................................................................................................................... 116-122 Ralph Alquezar, Scott J. Markich and David J. Booth Metal accumulation in the smooth toadfish, Tetractenos glaber, in estuaries around Sydney, Australia •.......................................................................................................................................... 123-131 Ralph Alquezar, Scott J. Markich and David J. Booth Sorption and bioreduction of hexavalent uranium at a military facility by the Chesapeake Bay •.... 132-142 Wenming Dong, Guibo Xie, Todd R. Miller, Mark P. Franklin, Tanya Palmateer Oxenberg, Edward J. Bouwer, William P. Ball and Rolf U. Halden Air-vegetation transfer of PCDD/PCDFs: An assessment of field data and implications for modeling •......................................................................................................................................................... 143-150 Marta Schuhmacher, Kevin C. Jones and Jose L. Domingo Comparison of the role of the sea club-rush Scirpus maritimus and the sea rush Juncus maritimus in terms of concentration, speciation and bioaccumulation of metals in the estuarine sediment • .. 151-159 C. Marisa R. Almeida, Ana P. Mucha and M. Teresa S.D. Vasconcelos Fate of heavy metals after application of sewage sludge and wood–ash mixtures to short-rotation willow coppice •................................................................................................................................. 160-169 I. Dimitriou, J. Eriksson, A. Adler, P. Aronsson and T. Verwijst Atmospheric concentrations and air–sea exchanges of nonylphenol, tertiary octylphenol and nonylphenol monoethoxylate in the North Sea • .............................................................................. 170-180 Zhiyong Xie, Soenke Lakaschus, Ralf Ebinghaus, Armando Caba and Wolfgang Ruck Aquatic risk assessment of the new rice herbicide profoxydim •...................................................... 181-189 Paloma Sánchez, Johanna Kubitza, G. Peter Dohmen and Jose V. Tarazona ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 142, No. 2, July 2006. Biodegradation and speciation of residual SS-ethylenediaminedisuccinic acid (EDDS) in soil solution left after soil washing • ........................................................................................................ 191-199 Susan Tandy, Adrian Ammann, Rainer Schulin and Bernd Nowack Use of hydra for chronic toxicity assessment of waters intended for human consumption • ........... 200-211 Victor V. Arkhipchuk, Christian Blaise and Maria V. Malinovskaya

Page 27: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

27

Consequences for Protaphorura armata (Collembola: Onychiuridae) following exposure to genetically modified Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) maize and non-Bt maize • ...................................... 212-216 Lars-Henrik Heckmann, Bryan S. Griffiths, Sandra Caul, Jacqueline Thompson, Marianne Pusztai-Carey, William J. Moar, Mathias N. Andersen and Paul Henning Krogh Physicochemical characterization and mercury speciation of particle-size soil fractions from an abandoned mining area in Mieres, Asturias (Spain) • ...................................................................... 217-226 Rodolfo Fernández-Martínez, Jorge Loredo, Almudena Ordóñez and María Isabel Rucandio A spatially-evaluated methodology for assessing risk to a population from contaminated land •.... 227-234 J. Rebecca Gay and Anna Korre Polychlorinated biphenyl congener patterns in tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) nesting in the Housatonic River watershed, western Massachusetts, USA, using a novel statistical approach •.. 235-245 Christine M. Custer and Lorraine B. Read Impact of short-term and long-term elevated CO2 on emission of carbonyls from adult Quercus petraea and Carpinus betulus trees • ............................................................................................... 246-253 Jürgen Kreuzwieser, Heinz Rennenberg and Rainer Steinbrecher Spatial variability and temporal stability of throughfall deposition under beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in relationship to canopy structure • ..................................................................................................... 254-263 Jeroen Staelens, An De Schrijver, Kris Verheyen and Niko E.C. Verhoest The marine macroalga Cystoseira baccata as biosorbent for cadmium(II) and lead(II) removal: Kinetic and equilibrium studies •....................................................................................................... 264-273 P. Lodeiro, J.L. Barriada, R. Herrero and M.E. Sastre de Vicente Benthic foraminifera and heavy metals distribution: A case study from the Naples Harbour (Tyrrhenian Sea, Southern Italy) • .................................................................................................... 274-287 L. Ferraro, M. Sprovieri, I. Alberico, F. Lirer, L. Prevedello and E. Marsella Influence of vegetation in mitigation of methyl parathion runoff •..................................................... 288-294 M.T. Moore, E.R. Bennett, C.M. Cooper, S. Smith, Jr., J.L. Farris, K.G. Drouillard and R. Schulz Evaluating the vulnerability of surface waters to antibiotic contamination from varying wastewater treatment plant discharges • ............................................................................................................. 295-302 Angela L. Batt, Ian B. Bruce and Diana S. Aga Metal stoichiometry in predicting Cd and Cu toxicity to a freshwater green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii • ........................................................................................................................................ 303-312 Wen-Xiong Wang and Robert C.H. Dei Seasonal variations in hepatic Cd and Cu concentrations and in the sub-cellular distribution of these metals in juvenile yellow perch (Perca flavescens) • ........................................................................ 313-325 Lisa D. Kraemer, Peter G.C. Campbell and Landis Hare Electrokinetic enhancement of phenanthrene biodegradation in creosote-polluted clay soil • ........ 326-332 José-Luis Niqui-Arroyo, Marisa Bueno-Montes, Rosa Posada-Baquero and José-Julio Ortega-Calvo Calibration of the Chemcatcher passive sampler for the monitoring of priority organic pollutants in water • ............................................................................................................................................... 333-343 Branislav Vrana, Graham A. Mills, Ewa Dominiak and Richard Greenwood Herbicide contamination of surficial groundwater in Northern Italy • ................................................ 344-353 Licia Guzzella, Fiorenzo Pozzoni and Giuseppe Giuliano Field responses of Prunus serotina and Asclepias syriaca to ozone around southern Lake Michigan •......................................................................................................................................................... 354-366 J.P. Bennett, E.A. Jepsen and J.A. Roth Perfluorooctanesulfonate and related fluorochemicals in biological samples from the north coast of Colombia •......................................................................................................................................... 367-372 Jesus Olivero-Verbel, Lin Tao, Boris Johnson-Restrepo, Jorge Guette-Fernández, Rosa Baldiris-Avila, Indira O'byrne-Hoyos and Kurunthachalam Kannan Heavy metals affect the coelomocyte-bacteria balance in earthworms: Environmental interactions between abiotic and biotic stressors • .............................................................................................. 373-381

Page 28: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

28

Ewa Olchawa, Malgorzata Bzowska, Stephen R. Stürzenbaum, A. John Morgan and Barbara Plytycz ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 142, No. 3, August 2006. Reproductive transfer of organochlorines in viviparous surfperch, Ditrema temmincki • ................. 383-387 Mayuko Oka, Takaomi Arai, Yasuyuki Shibata and Nobuyuki Miyazaki Atmospheric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in Asia: A review from 1999 to 2004 • ...... 388-396 Kuan-Foo Chang, Guor-Cheng Fang, Jhy-Cherng Chen and Yuh-Shen Wu Selenium and other trace metals in fish inhabiting a fly ash stream: Implications for regulatory tissue thresholds • ....................................................................................................................................... 397-408 Robin J. Reash, Timothy W. Lohner and Kenneth V. Wood Geochemical and Pb isotopic evidence for sources and dispersal of metal contamination in stream sediments from the mining and smelting district of Príbram, Czech Republic • ............................... 409-417 Vojtech Ettler, Martin Mihaljevic, Ondrej Šebek, Michael Molek, Tomáš Grygar and Josef Zeman Mercury accumulation in surface sediments of salt marshes of the Bay of Fundy • ........................ 418-431 Grace A. Hung and Gail L. Chmura Eco-toxicological studies of diesel and biodiesel fuels in aerated soil • ........................................... 432-437 Asta Lapinskiene, Povilas Martinkus and Vilija Rebždaite Non-destructive pollution exposure assessment in the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus): II. Hair and spines as indicators of endogenous metal and As concentrations •.............................. 438-448 Helga D'Havé, Jan Scheirs, Valentine Kayawe Mubiana, Ron Verhagen, Ronny Blust and Wim De Coen Cosorption study of organic pollutants and dissolved organic matter in a soil •............................... 449-456 F. Flores-Céspedes, M. Fernández-Pérez, M. Villafranca-Sánchez and E. González-Pradas High incidence of deformity in aquatic turtles in the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge •............ 457-465 Barbara Bell, James R. Spotila and Justin Congdon Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons affect survival and development of common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina) embryos and hatchlings •.............................................................................. 466-475 Robin J. Van Meter, James R. Spotila and Harold W. Avery Tissue-specific accumulation and lactational transfer of polychlorinated biphenyls, chlorinated pesticides, and brominated flame retardants in hooded seals (Cistophora cristata) from the Gulf of St. Lawrence: Applications for monitoring • ...................................................................................... 476-486 Hans Wolkers, Mike O. Hammill and Bert van Bavel Presence of plutonium contamination in soils from Palomares (Spain) •......................................... 487-492 M.C. Jiménez-Ramos, R. García-Tenorio, I. Vioque, G. Manjón and M. García-León Linking biosensor responses to Cd, Cu and Zn partitioning in soils • .............................................. 493-500 J.J.C. Dawson, C.D. Campbell, W. Towers, C.M. Cameron and G.I. Paton Using multivariate analyses and GIS to identify pollutants and their spatial patterns in urban soils in Galway, Ireland •............................................................................................................................... 501-511 Chaosheng Zhang Characterization of contamination in and toxicities of a shipyard area in Hong Kong • ................... 512-520 S.W. Chiu, K.M. Ho, S.S. Chan, O.M. So and K.H. Lai Study of the trace metal ion influence on the turnover of soil organic matter in cultivated contaminated soils •.......................................................................................................................... 521-529 C. Dumat, K. Quenea, A. Bermond, S. Toinen and M.F. Benedetti Field evaluation of in situ remediation of a heavy metal contaminated soil using lime and red-mud • 530-539 C.W. Gray, S.J. Dunham, P.G. Dennis, F.J. Zhao and S.P. McGrath Physiological and biochemical stress responses in grassland species are influenced by both early-season ozone exposure and interspecific competition •................................................................... 540-548

Page 29: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

29

Francesca Scebba, Francesca Canaccini, Antonella Castagna, Jürgen Bender, Hans-Joachim Weigel and Annamaria Ranieri Environmental contamination of mercury from Hg-mining areas in Wuchuan, northeastern Guizhou, China • .............................................................................................................................................. 549-558 Guangle Qiu, Xinbin Feng, Shaofeng Wang and Lihai Shang Effects of eutrophication on vitellogenin gene expression in male fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) exposed to 17a-ethynylestradiol in field mesocosms •.................................................... 559-566 Denise A. Gordon, Gregory P. Toth, David W. Graham, James M. Lazorchak, Tirumuru V. Reddy, Charles W. Knapp, Frank deNoyelles, Jr., Scott Campbell and David L. Lattier Geostatistical analysis and kriging of Hexachlorocyclohexane residues in topsoil from Tianjin, China •......................................................................................................................................................... 567-575 B.G. Li, J. Cao, W.X. Liu, W.R. Shen, X.J. Wang and S. Tao ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 143, No. 1, September 2006. In defence of plants as biomonitors of soil quality .................................................................................... 1-3 Paula Madejón, Teodoro Marañón, José M. Murillo and Brett Robinson Papers Cadmium and lead concentrations in Skrjabinotaenia lobata (Cestoda: Catenotaeniidae) and in its host, Apodemus sylvaticus (Rodentia: Muridae) in the urban dumping site of Garraf (Spain) • .............. 4-8 Jordi Torres, Jordi Peig, Catarina Eira and Miquel Borrás Effects of pH, organic acids, and inorganic ions on lead desorption from soils • ................................... 9-15 J.Y. Yang, X.E. Yang, Z.L. He, T.Q. Li, J.L. Shentu and P.J. Stoffella A comparison of Cu, Pb, As, Cd, Zn, Fe, Ni and Mn determined by acid extraction/ICP–OES and ex situ field portable X-ray fluorescence analyses • .................................................................................. 16-23 C. Kilbride, J. Poole and T.R. Hutchings Distribution of sorbed phenanthrene and pyrene in different humic fractions of soils and importance of humin •.............................................................................................................................................. 24-33 B. Pan, B.S. Xing, W.X. Liu, S. Tao, X.M. Lin, X.M. Zhang, Y.X. Zhang, Y. Xiao, H.C. Dai and H.S. Yuan Assessment of acid leachable trace metals in sediment cores from River Uppanar, Cuddalore, Southeast coast of India • ..................................................................................................................... 34-45 T. Ayyamperumal, M.P. Jonathan, S. Srinivasalu, J.S. Armstrong-Altrin and V. Ram-Mohan Source determination of highly chlorinated biphenyl isomers in pine needles – Comparison to several PCB preparations •................................................................................................................... 46-59 Barbara Wyrzykowska, Ilona Bochentin, Nobuyasu Hanari, Anna Orlikowska, Jerzy Falandysz, Horii Yuichi and Nobuyoshi Yamashita A predictive model for copper partitioning to suspended particulate matter in river waters •............... 60-72 Yuefeng Lu and Herbert E. Allen EPR monitoring of the bioavailability of an organic xenobiotic (4-hydroxy-TEMPO) in model clay suspensions and pastes • ..................................................................................................................... 73-80 Alain Dumestre, Matteo Spagnuolo, Rebecca Bladon, Jacques Berthelin and Philippe Baveye Biomonitoring using the lichen Hypogymnia physodes and bark samples near Zlatna, Romania immediately following closure of a copper ore-processing plant •........................................................ 81-88 A.-M. Rusu, G.C. Jones, P.D.J. Chimonides and O.W. Purvis Metal concentrations in Kandalaksha Bay, White Sea (Russia) following the spring snowmelt •........ 89-99 A. Cobelo-García, G.E. Millward, R. Prego and V. Lukashin Acid sulphate soil disturbance and metals in groundwater: Implications for human exposure through home grown produce •...................................................................................................................... 100-105 Andrea Lee Hinwood, Pierre Horwitz, Steve Appleyard, Caroline Barton and Magda Wajrak

Page 30: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

30

Physicochemical and biological characterisation of different dredged sediment deposit sites in France •............................................................................................................................................. 106-116 Xavier Capilla, Christophe Schwartz, Jean-Philippe Bedell, Thibault Sterckeman, Yves Perrodin and Jean-Louis Morel Nitrogen balance and groundwater nitrate contamination: Comparison among three intensive cropping systems on the North China Plain • ................................................................................... 117-125 X.T. Ju, C.L. Kou, F.S. Zhang and P. Christie A two-compartment exposure device for foliar uptake study ............................................................ 126-128 Q. Zuo, H. Lin, X.L. Zhang, Q.L. Li, S.Z. Liu and S. Tao The veterinary antibiotic oxytetracycline and Cu influence functional diversity of the soil microbial community • ...................................................................................................................................... 129-137 W.-D. Kong, Y.-G. Zhu, B.-J. Fu, P. Marschner and J.-Z. He Plant-mediated effects of heavy metal pollution on host choice of a grass miner • ......................... 138-145 Jan Scheirs, Inez Vandevyvere, Kjell Wollaert, Ronny Blust and Luc De Bruyn Remediation efficiency of vapour extraction of sandy soils contaminated with cyclohexane: Influence of air flow rate, water and natural organic matter content • .............................................. 146-152 José Tomás Albergaria, Maria da Conceição M. Alvim-Ferraz and Cristina Delerue-Matos Studies of mercury pollution in a lake due to a thermometer factory situated in a tourist resort: Kodaikkanal, India • .......................................................................................................................... 153-158 D. Karunasagar, M.V. Balarama Krishna, Y. Anjaneyulu and J. Arunachalam Cadmium contamination in orchard soils and fruit trees and its potential health risk in Guangzhou, China • .............................................................................................................................................. 159-165 J.T. Li, J.W. Qiu, X.W. Wang, Y. Zhong, C.Y. Lan and W.S. Shu The Akoya pearl oyster shell as an archival monitor of lead exposure • .......................................... 166-173 G.R. MacFarlane, S.J. Markich, K. Linz, S. Gifford, R.H. Dunstan, W. O'Connor and R.A. Russell Increased formation of carcinogenic PAH metabolites in fish promoted by nitrite •......................... 174-177 M.S. Shailaja, Rani Rajamanickam and Solimabi Wahidulla Detrital control on the release of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) from the forest floor under chronic N deposition •................................................................... 178-185 Ji-Hyung Park and Egbert Matzner ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: Vol. 143, No. 2 September 2006. Evidence for declining levels of heavy-metals in the Severn Estuary and Bristol Channel, U.K. and their spatial distribution in sediments • ............................................................................................. 187-196 Sabine Duquesne, Lyn C. Newton, Lorenzo Giusti, Susan B. Marriott, Hans-Joachim Stärk and David J. Bird Distribution of soil arsenic species, lead and arsenic bound to humic acid molar mass fractions in a contaminated apple orchard •........................................................................................................... 197-205 Kimberly Newton, Dulasiri Amarasiriwardena and Baoshan Xing Procedures of trophic chain samples preparation for determination of triazines by HPLC and metals by ICP-AES methods •...................................................................................................................... 206-211 Irena Baranowska, Hanna Barchanska and Ewa Pacak Detection of Copper(II) and zinc(II) binding to humic acids from pig slurry and amended soils by fluorescence spectroscopy • ............................................................................................................. 212-220 Diana Hernández, César Plaza, Nicola Senesi and Alfredo Polo Cu and Zn adsorption onto non-residual and residual components in the natural surface coatings samples (NSCSs) in the Songhua River, China •............................................................................. 221-227 Yu Li, Xiaoli Wang, Shuhai Guo and Deming Dong Modelling trace metal partitioning in forest floors of northern soils near metal smelters • ............... 228-240 J.D. MacDonald and W.H. Hendershot

Page 31: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

31

Optimization of an effective extraction procedure for the analysis of microcystins in soils and lake sediments • ....................................................................................................................................... 241-246 Wei Chen, Lin Li, Nanqin Gan and Lirong Song Nitrification in polluted soil fertilized with fast- and slow-releasing nitrogen: A case study at a refinery landfarming site • .............................................................................................................................. 247-253 Rainer Peltola, Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen, Janne Pulkkinen, Marja Koivunen, Anna-Riina Turpeinen, Tuula Aarnio and Martin Romantschuk Arsenic chemistry in the rhizosphere of Pteris vittata L. and Nephrolepis exaltata L. • ................... 254-260 Maria I. Silva Gonzaga, Jorge A.G. Santos and Lena Q. Ma Effective remediation of grossly polluted acidic, and metal-rich, spoil heap drainage using a novel, low-cost, permeable reactive barrier in Northumberland, UK • ........................................................ 261-268 A.P. Jarvis, M. Moustafa, P.H.A. Orme and P.L. Younger Antimicrobial-resistant patterns of Escherichia coli and Salmonella strains in the aquatic Lebanese environments • .................................................................................................................................. 269-277 Steve Harakeh, Hadi Yassine and Mutasem El-Fadel Towards a multidisciplinary and integrated strategy in the assessment of adverse health effects related to air pollution: The case study of Cracow (Poland) and asthma •....................................... 278-284 Jean-Paul Oudinet, Julie Méline, Wojciech Chelmicki, Marek Sanak, Dutsch-Wicherek Magdalena, Jean-Pierre Besancenot, Stanislas Wicherek, Bertrand Julien-Laferrière, Jean-Paul Gilg, Hélène Geroyannis et al. Spatio-temporal variation of element accumulation by Moehringia trinervia in a polluted forest ecosystem (South Poland) • ............................................................................................................. 285-293 Pawel Kapusta, Grazyna Szarek-Lukaszewska and Barbara Godzik Seasonal and spatial distributions of tributyltin in surface sediment of the Tolka Estuary, Dublin, Ireland •............................................................................................................................................. 294-303 Conor J. Buggy and John M. Tobin Morphological and cytological responses of Ammonia (foraminifera) to copper contamination: Implication for the use of foraminifera as bioindicators of pollution • ............................................... 304-317 Valérie Le Cadre and Jean-Pierre Debenay Changing contaminant mobility in a dredged canal sediment during a three-year phytoremediation trial • .................................................................................................................................................. 318-326 Rosalind F. King, Anna Royle, Philip D. Putwain and Nicholas M. Dickinson Taiwan's industrial heavy metal pollution threatens terrestrial biota • .............................................. 327-334 M.J. Hsu, K. Selvaraj and G. Agoramoorthy The effect of emissions of fertilizer production on the environment contamination by cadmium and arsenic in southern Brazil • ............................................................................................................... 335-340 Nicolai Mirlean and Ari Roisenberg Effects of simultaneous ozone exposure and nitrogen loads on carbohydrate concentrations, biomass, growth, and nutrient concentrations of young beech trees (Fagus sylvatica) • ................ 341-354 V.F.D. Thomas, S. Braun and W. Flückiger Ecotoxicity, phytotoxicity and extractability of heavy metals from different stabilised sewage sludges •......................................................................................................................................................... 355-360 Ana Fuentes, Mercedes Lloréns, José Sáez, M Isabel Aguilar, Ana Belén Pérez-Marín, Juan F. Ortuño and Victor F. Meseguer Predicting Gran alkalinity and calcium concentrations in river waters over a national scale using a novel modification to the G-BASH model • ....................................................................................... 361-366 Malcolm S. Cresser, Nayan Ahmed, Richard P. Smart, Toyin Arowolo, Louise J. Calver and Pippa J. Chapman Monitoring losses of copper based wood preservatives in the Thames estuary •............................ 367-375 J.A. Hingston, R.J. Murphy and J.N. Lester

Page 32: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

32

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: Vol. 23, No. 7, July 2004. BUILDING BRIDGES: SCIENCE TO MANAGEMENT—LOCAL TO GLOBAL—Editorial Christopher W. Hickey, President 1583 Environmental Chemistry INDICES FOR BIOAVAILABILITY AND BIOTRANSFORMATION POTENTIAL OF CONTAMINANTS IN SOILS Washington J. Braida, Jason C. White and Joseph J. Pignatello .......................................................... 1585 MODEL-AIDED CHARACTERIZATION OF TENAX®-TA FOR AROMATIC COMPOUND UPTAKE FROM WATER Dongye Zhao and Joseph J. Pignatello................................................................................................. 1592 ESTIMATION OF MICROBIAL REDUCTIVE TRANSFORMATION RATES FOR CHLORINATED BENZENES AND PHENOLS USING A QUANTITATIVE STRUCTURE–ACTIVITY RELATIONSHIP APPROACH Caroline L. Tebes-Stevens and W. Jack Jones ..................................................................................... 1600 PARTICULATE ARSENIC AND IRON DURING ANOXIA IN A EUTROPHIC, URBAN LAKE David B. Senn and Harold F. Hemond .................................................................................................. 1610 OVERVIEW AND COMPARISON OF LIPID-CONTAINING SEMIPERMEABLE MEMBRANE DEVICES AND OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA GIGAS) FOR ASSESSING ORGANIC CHEMICAL EXPOSURE James N. Huckins, Harry F. Prest, Jimmie D. Petty, Jon A. Lebo, Maureen M. Hodgins, Randal C. Clark, David A. Alvarez, William R. Gala, Alexis Steen, Robert Gale and Christopher G. Ingersoll ..... 1617 INCORPORATING MONTE CARLO ANALYSIS INTO MULTIMEDIA ENVIRONMENTAL FATE MODELS Mario J. Citra .......................................................................................................................................... 1629 TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON VERY SLOW DESORPTION OF NATIVE CHLOROBENZENES FROM SEDIMENT TO WATER Th.E.M. ten Hulscher, Bea A. Vrind, Paul C.M. van Noort and Harrie A.J. Govers .............................. 1634 DEVELOPMENT OF A PASSIVE, IN SITU, INTEGRATIVE SAMPLER FOR HYDROPHILIC ORGANIC CONTAMINANTS IN AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS David A. Alvarez, Jimmie D. Petty, James N. Huckins, Tammy L. Jones-Lepp, Dominic T. Getting, Jon P. Goddard and Stanley E. Manahan ............................................................................................. 1640 EFFECT OF THIOARSENITE FORMATION ON ARSENIC(III) TOXICITY Kevin J. Rader, Paul M. Dombrowski, Kevin J. Farley, John D. Mahony and Dominic M. Di Toro....... 1649 Environmental Toxicology THE EFFECTS OF DECANTED SEDIMENTS ON EMBRYOGENESIS IN OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA GIGAS) Olivier Geffard, Helene Budzinski and Edouard His.............................................................................. 1655 SUSCEPTIBILITY OF THE LEAF-EATING BEETLE, GALERUCELLA CALMARIENSIS, A BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENT FOR PURPLE LOOSESTRIFE (LYTHRUM SALCARIA), TO THREE MOSQUITO CONTROL LARVICIDES T. Peter Lowe and Troy D. Hershberger ............................................................................................... 1662 ACCUMULATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF POLYCHLORINATED DIBENZO-p-DIOXIN, DIBENZOFURAN, AND POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL CONGENERS IN ATLANTIC SALMON (SALMO SALAR) Pirjo Isosaari, Hannu Kiviranta, Øyvind Lie, Anne-Katrine Lundebye, Gordon Ritchie and Terttu Vartiainen............................................................................................................................................... 1672 CONTAMINANT EFFECTS ON THE TELEOST FISH THYROID Scott B. Brown, Bruce A. Adams, Daniel G. Cyr and J. Geoffrey Eales 1680 AVOIDANCE OF COPPER CONTAMINATION BY FIELD POPULATIONS OF DAPHNIA LONGISPINA

Page 33: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

33

Isabel Lopes, Donald J. Baird and Rui Ribeiro...................................................................................... 1702 TOXICITY OF OIL SANDS TO EARLY LIFE STAGES OF FATHEAD MINNOWS (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS) Maria V. Colavecchia, Sean M. Backus, Peter V. Hodson and Joanne L. Parrott ................................ 1709 EFFECTS OF DIETARY ZINC EXPOSURE ON THE LIFE HISTORY OF THE PARTHENOGENETIC SPRINGTAIL FOLSOMIA CANDIDA (COLLEMBOLA: ISOTOMIDAE) C. Els Smit, Ed M. Stam, Nicolette Baas, Ronald Hollander and Cornelis A.M. Van Gestel ................ 1719 TOXICOKINETICS OF THREE POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL TECHNICAL MIXTURES IN RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) Andrea H. Buckman, Scott B. Brown, Paul F. Hoekstra, Keith R. Solomon and Aaron T. Fisk ............ 1725 GROWTH AND SURVIVAL OF FIVE AMPHIBIAN SPECIES EXPOSED TO COMBINATIONS OF PESTICIDES Rick A. Relyea ....................................................................................................................................... 1737 COMPETITION EFFECTS FOR COPPER BETWEEN SOIL, SOIL SOLUTION, AND YEAST IN A BIOASSAY FOR FOLSOMIA CANDIDA WILLEM Sjoerd E.A.T.M. van der Zee, Erwin J.M. Temminghoff and Mari P.J.C. Marinussen .......................... 1743 A FIELD TEST AND COMPARISON OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC SEDIMENT TOXICITY TESTS WITH THE ESTUARINE AMPHIPOD LEPTOCHEIRUS PLUMULOSUS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY, USA Beth L. McGee, Daniel J. Fisher, David A. Wright, Lance T. Yonkos, Gregory P. Ziegler, Steven D. Turley, J. Daniel Farrar, David W. Moore and Todd S. Bridges ............................................................ 1751 IN SITU REPRODUCTION, ABUNDANCE, AND GROWTH OF YOUNG-OF-YEAR AND ADULT LARGEMOUTH BASS IN A POPULATION EXPOSED TOPOLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS Dudley W. Reiser, Emily S. Greenberg, Thomas E. Helser, Margaret Branton and Kenneth D. Jenkins................................................................................................................................................... 1762 Hazard/Risk Assessment ACUTE-TO-CHRONIC SPECIES SENSITIVITY DISTRIBUTION EXTRAPOLATION Cédric Duboudin, Philippe Ciffroy and Hélène Magaud ........................................................................ 1774 RELATIONSHIPS AMONG EXCEEDENCES OF METALS CRITERIA, THE RESULTS OF AMBIENT BIOASSAYS, AND COMMUNITY METRICS IN MINING-IMPACTED STREAMS Michael B. Griffith, James M. Lazorchak and Alan T. Herlihy ............................................................... 1786 Life-Cycle Assessment AQUATIC ECOTOXICOLOGICAL INDICATORS IN LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT David W. Pennington, Jerome Payet and Michael Hauschild ............................................................... 1796 GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 15, No. 3, May 2006. A resource-based conceptual model of plant diversity that reassesses causality in the productivity–diversity relationship Chris Lavers, Richard Field ...................................................................................................................... 213 Research Papers Predicting and quantifying the structure of tropical dry forests in South Florida and the Neotropics using spaceborne imagery Thomas W. Gillespie, Brian R. Zutta, Michael K. Early, Sassan Saatchi................................................. 225 Determinants of local abundance and range size in forest vascular plants Annette Kolb, Frank Barsch, Martin Diekmann ........................................................................................ 237 Leaf flushing during the dry season: the paradox of Asian monsoon forests Stephen Elliott, Patrick J. Baker, Rolf Borchert ........................................................................................ 248 Sensitivity of African biomes to changes in the precipitation regime Christelle Hély, Laurent Bremond, Samuel Alleaume, Benjamin Smith, Martin T. Sykes, Joël Guiot ..... 258 Imprints of glacial refugia in the modern genetic diversity of Pinus sylvestris

Page 34: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

34

Rachid Cheddadi, Giovanni Giuseppe Vendramin, Thomas Litt, Louis François, Masa Kageyama, Stephan Lorentz, Jeanne-Marine Laurent, Jacques-Louis de Beaulieu, Laura Sadori, Anne Jost, Daniel Lunt................................................................................................................................................ 271 The influence of matrix and edges on species richness patterns of ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in habitat islands Gábor L. Lövei, Tibor Magura, Béla Tóthmérész, Viktor Ködöböcz......................................................... 283 Energy availability, abundance, energy-use and species richness in forest bird communities: a test of the species–energy theory Mikko Mönkkönen, Jukka T. Forsman, Folmer Bokma ............................................................................ 290 A test of the mechanisms behind avian generalized individuals–area relationships Marco Pautasso, Kevin J. Gaston ............................................................................................................ 303 Library Letters A wealth of information on seagrass Ben Longstaff............................................................................................................................................ 318 The new standard text for fledgling ornithologists Steve Willis Do parasite organisms have biogeographies? Jean-François Guégan ............................................................................................................................. 319 ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE: Vol. 63, No. 4, May 2006. Indicators of the health of the North Sea fish community: identifying reference levels for an ecosystem approach to management • ............................................................................................ 573-593 Simon P.R. Greenstreet and Stuart I. Rogers Measuring the strength of environment–recruitment relationships: the importance of including predictor screening within cross-validations •................................................................................... 594-599 R.I.C. Chris Francis The Irish Sea cod recovery plan: some lessons learned • ............................................................... 600-610 Ciaran J. Kelly, Edward A. Codling and Emer Rogan Economic impacts of changes in the population dynamics of fish on the fisheries of the Barents Sea •......................................................................................................................................................... 611-625 P. Michael Link and Richard S.J. Tol Relationships between wave exposure and biomass of the goose barnacle (Pollicipes pollicipes, Gmelin, 1790) in the Gaztelugatxe Marine Reserve (Basque Country, northern Spain) • ............... 626-636 Ángel Borja, Pedro Liria, Iñigo Muxika and Juan Bald The influence of caged mariculture on the early development of sublittoral fouling communities: a pan-European study • ....................................................................................................................... 637-649 E.J. Cook, K.D. Black, M.D.J. Sayer, C.J. Cromey, D.L. Angel, E. Spanier, A. Tsemel, T. Katz, N. Eden, I. Karakassis et al. The effect of coastal topography on the spatial structure of anchovy and sardine •........................ 650-662 Marianna Giannoulaki, Athanassios Machias, Constantin Koutsikopoulos and Stylianos Somarakis Temporal and geographic variability of sardine maturity at length in the northeastern Atlantic and the western Mediterranean •............................................................................................................. 663-676 A. Silva, M.B. Santos, B. Caneco, G. Pestana, C. Porteiro, P. Carrera and Y. Stratoudakis Lidar target-strength measurements on Northeast Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) • ......... 677-682 Eirik Tenningen, James H. Churnside, Aril Slotte and James J. Wilson Target strength of the lanternfish, Stenobrachius leucopsarus (family Myctophidae), a fish without an airbladder, measured in the Bering Sea •.................................................................................... 683-692 Hiroki Yasuma, Yoshimi Takao, Kouichi Sawada, Kazushi Miyashita and Ichiro Aoki Population genetic structure of crimson snapper Lutjanus erythropterus in East Asia, revealed by analysis of the mitochondrial control region • ................................................................................... 693-704

Page 35: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

35

Junbin Zhang, Zeping Cai and Liangmin Huang Genetic impacts of shrimp trawling on red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) in the northern Gulf of Mexico • ............................................................................................................................................ 705-713 Eric Saillant, S. Coleen Bradfield and John R. Gold Larval distribution and growth of the rockfish, Sebastes capensis (Sebastidae, Pisces), in the fjords of southern Chile • ............................................................................................................................ 714-724 Mauricio F. Landaeta and Leonardo R. Castro The fishery for pelagic redfish (Sebastes mentella) in the Irminger Sea and adjacent waters • ...... 725-736 Th. Sigurðsson, K. Kristinsson, H-J. Rätz, K.H. Nedreaas, S.P. Melnikov and J. Reinert Seasonal variation in trawl codend selection of northern North Sea haddock •............................... 737-748 H. Özbilgin, R.S.T. Ferro, J.H.B. Robertson, G. Holtrop and R.J. Kynoch Pollock (Pollachius virens) stock structure in the Canadian Maritimes inferred from mark-recapture studies • ............................................................................................................................................ 749-765 John D. Neilson, Wayne T. Stobo and Peter Perley Density-dependent distribution of demersal juvenile Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland •................................................................................................................................. 766-774 David Robichaud and George A. Rose INDIAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCES: Vol. 34, No. 4, December 2005. Special Issue On: Ocean Colour Remote Sensing Remote sensing of ocean colour: Towards algorithms for retrieval of pigment composition *Shubha Sathyendranath, Venetia Stuart, Trevor Platt, Heather Bouman,Osvaldo Ulloa & Heidi Maass ................................................................................................................................................ 333-340 Comparison of in situ and remotely-sensed chlorophyll-a in the Northwest Atlantic *Cesar Fuentes-Yaco, Emmaneul Devred, Shubha Sathyendranath, Trevor Platt, Linda Payzant, Carla Caverhill, Cathy Porter, Heidi Maass & George N. White III.................................................... 341-355 A semi-analytic seasonal algorithm to retrieve chlorophyll-a concentration in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean from SeaWiFS data *E. Devred, C. Fuentes-Yaco, S. Sathyendranath, C. Caverhill, H.Maass, V. Stuart, T. Platt & G. White.................................................................................................................................................. 356-367 Artificial neural networks (ANN) based algorithms for chlorophyll estimation in the Arabian Sea *Prakash Chauhan, P.V. Nagamani & Shailesh Nayak.................................................................... 368-373 Detection of Trichodesmium bloom patches along the eastern Arabian Sea by IRS-P4/OCM ocean color sensor and by in situ measurements *Elgar Desa, T. Suresh, S.G.P. Matondkar, Ehrlich Desa, J. Goes, A.Mascarenhas, S.G. Parab, N. Shaikh & C.E.G. Fernandes .............................................................................................................. 374-386 Use of the first and second chlorophyll absortion bands for marine biogeochemical patch recognition Karl Heinz Szekielda.......................................................................................................................... 387-395 Applications of remotely-sensed ocean colour data in the Arabian Sea: A review *L.J. Watts, Beena Kumari & H. Maass............................................................................................ 396-407 Satellite-derived total and new phytoplankton production in the Gulf of Mexico Raquel M. Hidalgo-Gozalez, *Saul Alvarez-Borrego, Cesar Fuentes-Yaco & Trevor Platt ............. 408-417 Decadal variability in the Yellow and East China Seas as revealed by satellite ocean colour data (1979-2003) *SeungHyun Son, Janet Campbell, Mark Dowell & Sinjae Yoo ....................................................... 418-429 Exploration of fishery resources through integration of ocean colour with sea surface temperature: Indian experience *R.M. Dwivedi, H.U. Solanki, S.R. Nayak, D. Gulati & V.S. Somvanshi............................................ 430-440

Page 36: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

36

Application of QuikSCAT SeaWinds data to improve remotely sensed Potential Fishing Zones (PFZs) forecast methodology: Preliminary validation results *H.U. Solanki, Yashwant Pradhan, R.M. Dwivedi , Shailesh Nayak, D. Gulati & V.S. Somvanshi.. 441-448 A persistent eddy in the central Arabian Sea: Potential trophic significance *Beena Kumari, H.Maass, R.C.Panigrahy & R.R. Navalgund.......................................................... 449-458 Coastal processes along the Indian coast-Case studies based on synergistic use of IRS-P4 OCM and IRS-1C/1D data *A.S. Rajawat, Mukesh Gupta, Yashwant Pradhan, A.V. Thomaskutty & Shailesh Nayak .............. 459-472 ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE: Vol. XVIII, No. 1, 2006. A TENTATIVE MATHEMATICAL MODEL TO DESCRIBE THE EVOLUTION OF THE AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION RATES OF GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES WITH TEMPERATURE, PO2 AND PCO2 A. Andrich, A. Zinnai, F. Venturi, S. Silvestri and R. Fiorentini A mathematical model describing the evolution of aerobic and anaerobic respiration of Golden Delicious apples stored in refrigerated and controlled atmosphere, as a function of temperature, PO2 and PCO2 is presented and discussed. This paper reports: the hypothesis utilised to formulate the model; the kinetic equations used; the identification of the best values to be assigned to the functional parameters of the mathematical equations introduced; the model validation carried out by using an independent experimental data set. Despite the low number of functional parameters utilised, this model appears able to suitably describe the evolution of aerobic respiration and alcoholic fermentation rates of Golden Delicious apples stored at different temperatures, PO2 and PCO2. ........................................................................................................................................................... 3 PHYSICO-CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF GREEK FIR HONEYDEW HONEY FROM MARCHALINA HELLENICA (GEN.) IN COMPARISON TO OTHER MEDITERRANEAN HONEYDEW HONEYS N. Bacandritsos, A.G. Sabatini, I. Papanastasiou and C. Saitanis The first samples of recently produced fir honeydew honey, obtained from Marchalina hellenica (Gennadius) (Homoptera, Coccoidea, Margarodidae), originating from Mount Helmos in Greece were analysed and examined on the basis of physical and chemical parameters including humidity, acidity, sugar profile, hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) and diastase activity. These data were compared with five other Mediterranean honeydew honeys of different origin obtained from the literature. Analytical data of the Greek fir honey from M. hellenica honeydew complied with the E.U. legal limits. The sensorial analysis indicated that the organoleptic characteristics of this type of honeydew honey were very similar to the Greek fir honey derived from other coccids with respect to colour, taste and smell. The statistical analysis of the physico-chemical parameters of the six honey types revealed two major groups. One group consisted of three Greek honeys and the other included one Spanish and two Italian honeys. It also showed a marked similarity between the two Greek honeys that came from M. hellenica honeydew on either fir or pine trees.............................................................. 21 INVESTIGATION ON THE MICROFLORA OF CAPRINO LOMBARDO CHEESE FROM RAW GOAT MILK R. Foschino, C. Picozzi, M. Borghi, M.C. Cerliani and E. Cresci Samples of raw milk, whey culture and cheese from seven farms located in different areas of Lombardy (Italy) were analysed to investigate the microflora present in the production chain of Caprino Lombardo, a fresh goat cheese traditionally curdled using artisan starters. Lactic acid bacteria, coliforms and enterococci proved to be the main bacterial groups in the raw milk, while lactococci predominated in the artisan whey cultures. The 1-day-old and 15-day-old cheese samples showed, respectively, mean log counts: 9.27 and 8.58 CFU/g for lactococci, 5.95 and 7.21 CFU/g for yeasts and 4.41 and 4.07 CFU/g for enterococci. Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis was the predominant species in cheese, whereas L. garvieae, Streptococcus thermophilus and L.

Page 37: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

37

raffinolactis were present as minor components. The most detected yeast species in cheese samples were Galactomyces geotrichum, Kluyveromyces lactis and Yarrowia lipolytica.......................... 33 FATE OF LISTERIA MONOCYTOGENES DURING THE MANUFACTURE AND STORAGE OF CHEVRE METSOVO AND PICHTOGALO CHANION CHEESES A.K. Theodoridis, D.K. Papageorgiou, A. Abrahim and P.G. Karaioannoglou A mixture of pasteurized and raw goat’s milk inoculated with different populations of Listeria monocytogenes was used in the manufacture of Chevre Metsovo cheese (pH>5.0). L. monocytogenes grew rapidly with maximum populations up to 8.38-8.78 log10 CFU/g after 5-10 d (strain Scott A) or 7.60-7.78 log10 CFU/g after 30 d (strain CA). In separate experiments a pasteurized mixture of ewe’s and goat’s milk inoculated with L. monocytogenes was made into Pichtogalo Chanion cheese (pH at 4.43). The population of L. monocytogenes decreased rapidly and listeriae were not countable after 2-10 days. Depending on the number of cells in the initial inoculum, L. monocytogenes was not detected between 5 and 20 days after cheesemaking using cold enrichment. L. monocytogenes survived in frozen 48 h cheese at -20°C for one to more than three months. .............................................................................................................................................. 51 USE OF COLOUR MEASUREMENT TO EVALUATE YOGHURT QUALITY DURING STORAGE D. Cais-Sokolinska and J. Pikul The aim of the investigation was to evaluate the relationship between colour parameters (L*, a*, b*) and the syneresis and titratable acidity of yoghurt. After manufacture, the pH values of the yoghurts were adjusted to 4.45, 4.40 and 4.35. The susceptibility of the yoghurts to syneresis immediately after manufacture was identical, but it increased during storage. After 3 weeks of storage, the yoghurt with an initial pH value of 4.35 was the most prone to syneresis. The lower the initial pH of the yoghurt, the greater the increase of titratable acidity during storage. As the storage time increased, the degree to which the L*, a* and b* colour parameters decreased, depended on the initial pH of the yoghurts. The lowest values were recorded in yoghurt with an initial pH of 4.35. A high correlation coefficient was found between the L*, a* and b* colour parameter values and the syneresis and titratable acidity values, irrespective of the initial pH........................................................... 63 IN VITRO ANTIMICROBIAL AND ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITIES OF THE ESSENTIAL OILS AND METHANOL EXTRACTS OF HYSSOPUS OFFICINALIS L. SSP. ANGUSTIFOLIUS H. Özer, M. Sökmen, M. Gülluce, A. Adigüzel, H. Kiliç, F. Sahin, A. Sökmen and O. Baris The in vitro antimicrobial and antioxidant activities of the essential oil and methanol extract from Hyssopus officinalis L. ssp. angustifolius were investigated. The essential oil, which has pinocarvone, pinocamphone, and ß-pinene as main components, exhibited activity against eight bacteria, and ten fungi and a yeast, C. albicans, with Minimum Inhibitory Concentration values (MIC) ranging from 15.625 to 250 µL/mL; the methanol extract was inactive. With regard to antioxidant activity, the essential oil was inactive, while the methanol extract provided 50% inhibition at a concentration of 117.0 µg/mL in DPPH assay and 40% inhibition at the concentration of 2 g/L in linoleic acid test system. ............................................................................................................................. 73 SHORT COMMUNICATIONS FLAVONOIDS AND TERPENOIDS IN GOAT MILK IN RELATION TO FORAGE INTAKE V. De Feo, E. Quaranta, V. Fedele, S. Claps, R. Rubino and C. Pizza Milk from goats fed borage or hawthorn shows the presence of flavonoids and terpenoids. A comparison between the flavonoid content in the plants and in the milk of the goats seems to prove that the mammary route is one of the excretory pathways. Rutin and quercetin are excreted in part without modifications, while other compounds appear to have less structural complexity, indicating a metabolism that is probably mediated by the gastrointestinal microflora. The presence of phenolic compounds in the milk could affect the quality and sensory traits of the milk and milk products. ............. 85 EFFECT OF BIFIDOBACTERIUM LACTIS 420 ON MICROBIOTA AND IMMUNE FUNCTION A.C. Ouwehand, P. Nurminen, H. Mäkivuokko and N. Rautonen A pilot feeding trial was performed for four weeks to study the influence of Bifidobacterium lactis 420 on healthy adult volunteers. B. lactis levels increased by more than 1,000-fold. Total bifidobacteria increased only in subjects who had low initial levels. B. lactis 420 appeared to have some influence

Page 38: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

38

on the metabolism of the intestinal microbiota and immune markers were only marginally influenced. Interestingly, trends for inverse correlations between faecal TNF-a and IgA concentrations and B. lactis were noted. Further investigation with more subjects is needed to confirm these influences on the microbial metabolic activity...................................................................... 93 OCCURRENCE OF OCHRATOXIN A IN RAW HAM MUSCLES AND IN PORK PRODUCTS FROM NORTHERN ITALY A. Pietri, T. Bertuzzi, A. Gualla and G. Piva The occurrence of ochratoxin A (OTA) in different pork products was surveyed. Twenty-two samples of raw ham muscle were obtained from industrial plants for ham production and 84 samples of dry-cured ham (n=30), cooked ham (n=12), salami (n=12), coppa (n=18) and würstel (n=12) were collected from retail outlets located in the Emilia region (northern Italy). After extraction and immunoaffinity clean-up steps, OTA was quantified using HPLC-fluorescence detection. The limits of detection and quantification (LOQ) for the method used were 0.01 and 0.03 µg/kg, respectively. OTA was detected in 47% of the samples, but only 24% contained OTA above the LOQ. High levels of OTA were only found in some dry-cured ham samples:(5,17%) exceeded 1.0 µg/kg, the limit set by the Italian Ministry of Health guideline and (27%) exceeded 10 µg/kg; however, the median was only 0.02 µg/kg. The other pork products showed lower OTA contamination that was always below 0.30 µg/kg. The contribution of pork products to OTA intake in Italy appears to be negligible. .................................................................................................................... 99 CHEMICAL AND NUTRITIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF SOME ITALIAN NICHE MEAT PRODUCTS, RAW AND COOKED G. Tilloca, L. Cengarle, A. Carta and A. Porcu The nutritional variations in some typical semi-cured Italian meats after the cooking process were investigated. Three raw and three cooked samples of Bondiola, Cotechino (Modena and Cremona), Salama da sugo (Ferrara) and Lingua salmistrata (Veneto) were studied. For Lingua salmistrata the root, centre and tip were analysed separately. Water, NaCl and protein %, total lipid content and its characterization, nitrate and nitrite concentration and the energy supply were determined. The nutrient composition and energy supply did not change due to cooking, while the NaCl, nitrite and nitrate concentration decreased. .............................................................................................................. 107 JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 33, No. 5, May 2006. The first biogeographical map Malte C. Ebach, Daniel F. Goujet ............................................................................................................. 761 Special Paper Post-Eocene climate change, niche conservatism, and the latitudinal diversity gradient of New World birds Bradford A. Hawkins, José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho, Carlos A. Jaramillo, Stephen A. Soeller...... 770 Variation within the range Broad-scale patterns of body size in squamate reptiles of Europe and North America Miguel Á. Olalla-Tárraga, Miguel Á. Rodríguez, Bradford A. Hawkins..................................................... 781 Determinants of local abundance in a major radiation of Australian passerines (Aves: Meliphagoidea) Matthew R.E. Symonds, Christopher N. Johnson .................................................................................... 794 Biogeographical variation in the population density of wild boar (Sus scrofa) in western Eurasia Claudia Melis, Paulina A. Szafranska, Bogumila Jedrzejewska, Kamil Barton........................................ 803 Recent changes in the distribution of a marine gastropod, Patella rustica Linnaeus, 1758, and their relationship to unusual climatic events Fernando P. Lima, Nuno Queiroz, Pedro A. Ribeiro, Stephen J. Hawkins, António M. Santos............... 812 Fire ecology from three continents

Page 39: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

39

Long-term fire exclusion and ant community structure in an Australian tropical savanna: congruence with vegetation succession Alan N. Andersen, Tony Hertog, John C. Z. Woinarski ............................................................................ 823 Relationships of subalpine forest fires in the Colorado Front Range with interannual and multidecadal-scale climatic variation Jason S. Sibold, Thomas T. Veblen ......................................................................................................... 833 Fire disturbance disrupts co-occurrence patterns of terrestrial vertebrates in Mediterranean woodlands Maurizio Sarà, Enrico Bellia, Andrea Milazzo........................................................................................... 843 Anthropogenic and environmental influences on system properties Local and regional assessments of the impacts of plant invaders on vegetation structure and soil properties of Mediterranean islands Montserrat Vilà, Marc Tessier, Carey M. Suehs, Giuseppe Brundu, Luisa Carta, Alexandros Galanidis, Philip Lambdon, Manuela Manca, Frédéric Médail, Eva Moragues, Anna Traveset, Andreas Y. Troumbis, Philip E. Hulme ..................................................................................................... 853 Multi-species richness of boreal agricultural landscapes: effects of climate, biotope, soil and geographical location Sonja Kivinen, Miska Luoto, Mikko Kuussaari, Juha Helenius................................................................. 862 Cover and growth habit of Polylepis woodlands and shrublands in the mountains of central Argentina: human or environmental influence? Daniel Renison, Isabell Hensen, Ricardo Suarez, Ana M. Cingolani ....................................................... 876 Distribution of saltmarsh plant communities associated with environmental factors along a latitudinal gradient on the south-west Atlantic coast J. P. Isacch, C. S. B. Costa, L. Rodríguez-Gallego, D. Conde, M. Escapa, D. A. Gagliardini, O. O. Iribarne...................................................................................................................................................... 888 Microclimate, light adaptation and desiccation tolerance of epiphytic bryophytes in two Venezuelan cloud forests Yelitza León-Vargas, Stefan Engwald, Michael C. F. Proctor .................................................................. 901 Analytical developments in island biogeography Re-approaching the small island effect K. A. Triantis, K. Vardinoyannis, E. P. Tsolaki, I. Botsaris, K. Lika, M. Mylonas...................................... 914 A new algorithm to calculate the nestedness temperature of presence–absence matrices Miguel A. Rodríguez-Gironés, Luis Santamaría ....................................................................................... 924 Phylogeography Contrasting phylogeographical patterns of two closely related species, Machilus thunbergii and Machilus kusanoi (Lauraceae), in Taiwan Su-Hwa Wu, Ching-Yuan Hwang, Tsan-Piao Lin, Jeng-Der Chung, Yu-Pin Cheng, Shih-Ying Hwang....................................................................................................................................................... 936 Central Asian origin of and strong genetic differentiation among populations of the rare and disjunct Carex atrofusca (Cyperaceae) in the Alps Peter Schönswetter, Magnus Popp, Christian Brochmann ...................................................................... 948 Correspondence Biogeography, ecology and tectonics in New Guinea Michael Heads .......................................................................................................................................... 957 Book Review The pitfalls of interdisciplinary enquiry Christian Haak .......................................................................................................................................... 959 JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY: Vol. 33, No. 6, June 2006. Absence of post-Miocene Red Sea land bridges: biogeographic implications

Page 40: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

40

Carlos A. Fernandes, Eelco J. Rohling, Mark Siddall............................................................................... 961 Commentary Phylogeography and reef fishes: bringing ecology back into the argument J.H. Choat ................................................................................................................................................. 967 Phylogeography Phylogeography of the flag cabrilla Epinephelus labriformis (Serranidae): implications for the biogeography of the Tropical Eastern Pacific and the early stages of speciation in a marine shore fish Matthew T. Craig, Philip A. Hastings, Daniel J. Pondella II, D. Ross Robertson, Jorge A. Rosales-Casián....................................................................................................................................................... 969 Intraspecific genetic diversity of the endemic freshwater crab Candidiopotamon rathbunae (Decapoda, Brachyura, Potamidae) reflects five million years of the geological history of Taiwan Hsi-Te Shih, Huei-Chuan Hung, Christoph D. Schubart, Chaolun Allen Chen, Hsueh-Wen Chang ....... 980 Comparative phylogeography and species boundaries in Echinolittorina snails in the central Indo-West Pacific David G. Reid, Kalpana Lal, Jacqueline Mackenzie-Dodds, Fontje Kaligis, D. Timothy J. Littlewood, Suzanne T. Williams................................................................................................................................. 990 Neotropical diversification: the effects of a complex history on diversity within the poison frog genus Dendrobates Brice P. Noonan, Kenneth P. Wray ........................................................................................................ 1007 Disparate distributional determinants Determinant variables of Iberian Peninsula Aphodiinae diversity (Coleoptera, Scarabaeoidea, Aphodiidae) Francisco J. Cabrero-Sañudo, Jorge M. Lobo........................................................................................ 1021 Environment, dispersal and patterns of species similarity Ofer Steinitz, Joseph Heller, Asaf Tsoar, Dotan Rotem, Ronen Kadmon.............................................. 1044 Does soil determine the boundaries of monodominant rain forest with adjacent mixed rain forest and maquis on ultramafic soils in New Caledonia? J. Read, T. Jaffré, J.M. Ferris, S. McCoy, G. S. Hope............................................................................ 1055 Panbiogeography of Nothofagus (Nothofagaceae): analysis of the main species massings Michael Heads ........................................................................................................................................ 1066 You are (where and) what you eat Biogeographical patterns in the diet of the wildcat, Felis silvestris Schreber, in Eurasia: factors affecting the trophic diversity Jorge Lozano, Marcos Moleón, Emilio Virgós ........................................................................................ 1076 Biogeographical patterns in endoparasite communities of a marine fish (Sebastes capensis Gmelin) with extended range in the Southern Hemisphere M. T. González, C. Barrientos, C. A. Moreno ......................................................................................... 1086 Exotic influences and altered landscapes Role of exotic tree stands on the current distribution and social behaviour of Swainson's hawk, Buteo swainsoni in the Argentine Pampas José Hernán Sarasola, Juan José Negro ............................................................................................... 1096 Effects of European colonization on indigenous ecosystems: post-settlement changes in tree stand structures in Eucalyptus–Callitris woodlands in central New South Wales, Australia Ian D. Lunt, Nigel Jones, Peter G. Spooner, Maree Petrow................................................................... 1102 How strongly do interactions with closely-related native species influence plant invasions? Darwin's naturalization hypothesis assessed on Mediterranean islands Philip W. Lambdon, Philip E. Hulme....................................................................................................... 1116 Investigating environmental variation and landscape characteristics of an urban–rural gradient using woodland carabid assemblages J. P. Sadler, E. C. Small, H. Fiszpan, M. G. Telfer, J. Niemelä.............................................................. 1126

Page 41: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

41

Influence of stand age and physical environment on the herb composition of second-growth forest, Strouds Run, Ohio, USA Sarah M. Harrelson, Glenn R. Matlack................................................................................................... 1139 Book Reviews The phytogeography of West Africa Lindsay Banin ......................................................................................................................................... 1150 Spatio-temporal processes in ecology: a gentle introduction Mevin B. Hooten, Christopher K. Wikle .................................................................................................. 1150 Bats, birds and butterflies: conserving pollinators Robin A. Bingham................................................................................................................................... 1151 JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY: Vol. 26, No. 2, May 2006. FIRST REPORT OF GYNANDROMORPHY IN PARTHENOGENETIC ARTEMIA (BRANCHIOPODA: ANOSTRACA) Rafael Campos-Ramos, Alejandro M. Maeda-Martínez, Hortencia Obregón-Barboza, Gopal Murugan, Danitzia A. Guerrero-Tortolero ................................................................................................. 107 THE MANDIBLES OF A HALOCYPRID OSTRACODE (HALOCYPRIDINA: HALOCYPRIDAE) – A NEW RECORD OF MANDIBULAR GNATHAL EDGES WITH A “LACINIA MOBILIS” Stefan Richter, Louis S. Kornicker............................................................................................................ 113 GENDER AND SPECIES DIFFERENCES IN SENTINEL CRABS (MACROPHTHALMUS) FEEDING ON AN INDONESIAN MUDFLAT P.-Manuela M. Schuwerack, Richard S. K. Barnes, Graham J. C. Underwood, Peter W. Jones ............ 119 SPECIES IDENTIFICATION AND ECOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE GENUS PALAEMONETES (DECAPODA: CARIDEA) IN THE FRENCH MEDITERRANEAN Agnès Gelin, Catherine Souty-Grosset .................................................................................................... 124 ASYMMETRY IN MUTUAL PREDATION BETWEEN THE ENDANGERED JAPANESE NATIVE CRAYFISH CAMBAROIDES JAPONICUS AND THE NORTH AMERICAN INVASIVE CRAYFISH PACIFASTACUS LENIUSCULUS: A POSSIBLE REASON FOR SPECIES REPLACEMENT Kazuyoshi Nakata, Seiji Goshima............................................................................................................. 134 SEASONAL CHANGES IN REPRODUCTIVE TRAITS OF THE CRAB SESARMA RECTUM (GRAPSOIDEA: SESARMIDAE) ON THE NORTHERN COAST OF SÃO PAULO STATE, BRAZIL Maria Helena de Arruda Leme.................................................................................................................. 141 SIZE-DEPENDENT INTRAGUILD RECIPROCAL PREDATION BETWEEN HELICE TRIDENS DE HAAN AND H. JAPONICA SAKAI AND YATSUZUKA (DECAPODA: GRAPSIDAE) AS ANALYZED IN FIELD EXPERIMENTS Koji Omori, Yoshihisa Kikutani, Bangban Irawan, Yukiko Goda .............................................................. 148 LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE HERMIT CRAB PAGURUS EDWARDSII (DECAPODA: ANOMURA: PAGURIDAE) UNDER LABORATORY CONDITIONS Erwin M. Barria, Eduardo E. DaForno, Carlos G. Jara............................................................................. 154 RECONSTRUCTION OF THE FOSSIL MUD SHRIMP CALLIANOPSIS CLALLAMENSIS Edwin Harris East ..................................................................................................................................... 168 CIRCULATING ECDYSTEROID CONCENTRATIONS IN ALASKAN DUNGENESS CRAB (CANCER MAGISTER) Jamie D. Thomton, Sherry L. Tamone, Shannon Atkinson ...................................................................... 176 Evaluating the monophyly of Eulimnadia and the Limnadiinae (Branchiopoda: Spinicaudata) using DNA sequences W. R. Hoeh, N. D. Smallwood, D. M. Senyo, E. G. Chapman, S. C. Weeks ........................................... 182 PRELIMINARY MOLECULAR AND MORPHOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE CALAPPA LOPHOS SPECIES GROUP (DECAPODA:BRACHYURA:CALAPPIDAE) Joelle C. Y. Lai, W. K. Chan, Peter K. L. Ng ............................................................................................ 193

Page 42: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

42

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF VERMIFORM GENERA (COPEPODA: HARPACTICOIDA: CYLINDROPSYLLIDAE), INCLUDING DESCRIPTIONS OF BOREOVERMIS, NEW GENUS AND BOLBOTELOS, NEW GENUS, FROM THE SOUTHERN NORTH SEA Rony Huys, Sophie Conroy-Dalton........................................................................................................... 206 SPONGICOLOIDES IHEYAENSIS, A NEW SPECIES OF DEEP-SEA SPONGE-ASSOCIATED SHRIMP FROM THE IHEYA RIDGE, RYUKYU ISLANDS, SOUTHERN JAPAN (DECAPODA: STENOPODIDEA: SPONGICOLIDAE) Tomomi Saito, Shinji Tsuchida, Tomoko Yamamoto................................................................................ 224 TWO NEW AXIOIDS (DECAPODA: THALASSINIDEA) FROM NEW CALEDONIA Feng-Jiau Lin ............................................................................................................................................ 234 NEW SPECIES OF FRESHWATER CRAB FROM VENEZUELA AND REDESCRIPTION OF MICROTHELPHUSA RODRIGUEZI PRETZMANN, 1968 (BRACHYURA: PSEUDOTHELPHUSOIDEA: PSEUDOTHELPHUSIDAE) Héctor Suárez ........................................................................................................................................... 242 REMARKS ON THE FRESHWATER CRABS OF ANGOLA, SOUTHWESTERN AFRICA, WITH THE DESCRIPTION OF POTAMONAUTES KENSLEYI, NEW SPECIES (BRACHYURA: POTAMOIDEA: POTAMONAUTIDAE) Neil Cumberlidge, Marcos Tavares .......................................................................................................... 248 OBITUARIES PAULO SECCHIN YOUNG 24 FEBRUARY 1960–31 MAY 2004 Cristiana S. Serejo, Paulo C. Paiva.......................................................................................................... 258 JOHN SHRADER GARTH 3 OCTOBER 1909–18 OCTOBER 1993 Mary K. Wicksten, Joel W. Martin, J. Antonio Baeza ............................................................................... 262 BOOK REVIEWS BOOK REVIEW Gustavo A. Lovrich ................................................................................................................................... 267 BOOK REVIEW Francesca Gherardi .................................................................................................................................. 269 ANNOUNCEMENT Christopher B. Boyko................................................................................................................................ 270 JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY: Vol. 94, No. 3, May 2006. Mike Hutchings, David Gibson Ecosystems and human impacts .............................................................................................................. 509 Ecosystem science and human–environment interactions in the Hawaiian archipelago PETER VITOUSEK................................................................................................................................... 510 The diversity and conservation of plant reproductive and dispersal functional traits in human-dominated tropical landscapes MARGARET M. MAYFIELD, DAVID ACKERLY, GRETCHEN C. DAILY................................................ 522 Self-organized vegetation patterning as a fingerprint of climate and human impact on ssemi-arid ecosystems NICOLAS BARBIER, PIERRE COUTERON, JEAN LEJOLY, VINCENT DEBLAUWE, OLIVIER LEJEUNE.................................................................................................................................................. 537 Previous land use alters plant allocation and growth in forest herbs JENNIFER M. FRATERRIGO, MONICA G. TURNER, SCOTT M. PEARSON ....................................... 548 Natural and anthropogenic variation in coarse wood among and within lakes ANNA E. MARBURG, MONICA G. TURNER, TIMOTHY K. KRATZ....................................................... 558 Species diversity Why are there so many small plants? Implications for species coexistence LONNIE W. AARSSEN, BRANDON S. SCHAMP, JASON PITHER ....................................................... 569

Page 43: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

43

Ecological correlates of range structure in rare and scarce British plants MICHAEL J. O. POCOCK, STEPHEN HARTLEY, MARK G. TELFER, CHRISTOPHER D. PRESTON, WILLIAM E. KUNIN............................................................................................................... 581 The effects of neighbouring tree islands on pollinator density and diversity, and on pollination of a wet prairie species, Asclepias lanceolata (Apocynaceae) DEREK R. ARTZ, KEITH D. WADDINGTON........................................................................................... 597 Geographic patterns of diversity in streams are predicted by a multivariate model of disturbance and productivity BRADLEY J. CARDINALE, HELMUT HILLEBRAND, DONALD F. CHARLES ....................................... 609 Impacts of herbivores Herbivore-induced plant volatiles induce an indirect defence in neighbouring plants C. KOST, M. HEIL .................................................................................................................................... 619 Strategies of Solanum carolinense for regulating maternal investment in response to foliar and floral herbivory MICHAEL J. WISE, JEREMIAH J. CUMMINS ......................................................................................... 629 Transient facilitative effects of heather on Scots pine along a grazing disturbance gradient in Scottish moorland R. W. BROOKER, D. SCOTT, S. C. F. PALMER, E. SWAINE................................................................ 637 Neighbourhood composition determines growth, architecture and herbivory in tropical rain forest tree seedlings FERGUS P. MASSEY, KATE MASSEY, MALCOLM C. PRESS, SUE E. HARTLEY ............................. 646 Comparing the direct and community-mediated effects of disturbance on plant population dynamics: flooding, herbivory and Mimulus guttatus BRET D. ELDERD, DAN F. DOAK........................................................................................................... 656 Functional relationships The role of wood density and stem support costs in the growth and mortality of tropical trees DAVID A. KING, STUART J. DAVIES, SYLVESTER TAN, NUR SUPARDI MD. NOOR ........................ 670 Preventing crown collisions increases the crown cover and leaf area of maturing lodgepole pine SHAWN X. MENG, MARK RUDNICKI, VICTOR J. LIEFFERS, DOUGLAS E. B. REID, ULDIS SILINS....................................................................................................................................................... 681 The evolution of rewards: seed dispersal, seed size and elaiosome size WILL EDWARDS, MICHAEL DUNLOP, LOUISE RODGERSON............................................................ 687 Biological Flora of the British Isles Biological flora of the British Isles: Cakile maritima Scop. A. J. DAVY, R. SCOTT, C. V. CORDAZZO.............................................................................................. 695 JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH: Vol. 28, No. 5, May 2006. Meng Zhou What determines the slope of a plankton biomass spectrum?.......................................................... 437-448 Andreas Reul, J. Rodríguez, J. M. Blanco, A. Rees, and P. H. Burkill Control of microplankton size structure in contrasting water columns of the Celtic Sea................... 449-457 Andrew J. Irwin, Zoe V. Finkel, Oscar M. E. Schofield, and Paul G. Falkowski Scaling-up from nutrient physiology to the size-structure of phytoplankton communities J. Plankton Res. 2006 28: .................................................................................................................................... 459-471 F. Alemany, S. Deudero, B. Morales-Nin, J. L. López-Jurado, J. Jansà, M. Palmer, and I. Palomera Influence of physical environmental factors on the composition and horizontal distribution of summer larval fish assemblages off Mallorca island (Balearic archipelago, western Mediterranean)473-487 Søren Laurentius Nielsen Size-dependent growth rates in eukaryotic and prokaryotic algae exemplified by green algae and cyanobacteria: comparisons between unicells and colonial growth forms........................................ 489-498

Page 44: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

44

Ingrid Gismervik Top-down impact by copepods on ciliate numbers and persistence depends on copepod and ciliate species composition .......................................................................................................................... 499-507 J. Mann, S. Ott, H. L. Pécseli, and J. Trulsen Laboratory studies of predator–prey encounters in turbulent environments: effects of changes in orientation and field of view ............................................................................................................... 509-522 A. Miguel P. Santos, Pedro Ré, Antonina dos Santos, and Álvaro Peliz Vertical distribution of the European sardine (Sardina pilchardus) larvae and its implications for their survival............................................................................................................................................... 523-532 JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 55, No. 4, May 2006. Spatial variation in phytoplankton dynamics in the Belgian coastal zone of the North Sea studied by microscopy, HPLC-CHEMTAX and underway fluorescence recordings •........................................ 253-265 Koenraad Muylaert, Rhia Gonzales, Melanie Franck, Marie Lionard, Claar Van der Zee, André Cattrijsse, Koen Sabbe, Lei Chou and Wim Vyverman Modelling and forecasting long-term dynamics of Western Baltic macrobenthic fauna in relation to climate signals and environmental change • .................................................................................... 266-277 Joachim Gröger and Heye Rumohr Spatial variation of the intertidal sediments and macrozoo-benthic assemblages along Eighty-mile Beach, North-western Australia •...................................................................................................... 278-291 Pieter J.C. Honkoop, Grant B. Pearson, Marc S.S. Lavaleye and Theunis Piersma The physiology of the larva of the Chilean oyster Ostrea chilensis and the utilisation of biochemical energy reserves during development: An extreme case of the brooding habit •.............................. 292-300 O.R. Chaparro, L.R. Navarrete and R.J. Thompson Endoparasites in common eiders Somateria mollissima from birds killed by an oil spill in the northern Wadden Sea • .................................................................................................................... 301-308 David W. Thieltges, Birgit Hussel and Henrik Baekgaard Dietary plasticity of the oceanic striped dolphin, Stenella coeruleoalba, in the neritic waters of the Bay of Biscay • .................................................................................................................................. 309-320 J. Spitz, E. Richard, L. Meynier, C. Pusineri and V. Ridoux JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 24, No. 1, January 2005. IN MEMORIAM John B. Glude(1918–2004), ........................................................................................................................ 1 G. Rouillon, J. Guerra Rivas, N. Ochoa and E. Navarro Phytoplankton composition of the stomach contents of the mussel Mytilus edulis L. from two populations: comparison with its food supply, ............................................................................................ 5 T. Strohmeier, J. Aure, A. Duinker, T. Castberg, A. Svardai and Ø. Strand Flow reduction, seston depletion, meat content and distribution of diarrhetic shellfish toxins in a long-line blue mussel(Mytilus edulis) farm, ............................................................................................... 15 Teresa Amaro, Gerard Duineveld and Paul Tyler Does Mya truncata reproduce at its southern distribution limit? Preliminary information, ........................ 25 Shirley M. Baker, Patrick Baker, David Heuberger and Leslie Sturmer Short-term effects of rapid salinity reduction on seed clams (Mercenaria mercenaria), .......................... 29 J. R. Dougherty and Michael P. Russell The association between the coquina clam Donax fossor say and its epibiotic hydroid Lovenella gracilis Clarke, .......................................................................................................................................... 35 Kevin Leblanc, Marc Ouellette, Ghislain A. Chouinard and Thomas Landry

Page 45: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

45

Commercial harvest and population structure of a northern quahog (Mercenaria mercenaria linnaeus 1758) population in St. Mary’s Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada. ....................................................... 47 Cristian Gallardo-Escarate, Josue Alvarez-Borrego, Elisabeth von Brand-Skopnik and Miguel Angel del Rio-Portilla Genome size estimation in two populations of the northern chilean scallop, Argopecten purpuratus, using fluorescence image analysis, .......................................................................................................... 55 Angeles Louro, Gyda Christophersen, Thorolf Magnesen and Guillermo Roman Suspension culture of the great scallop Pecten maximus in galicia, NW Spain—intermediate primary culture of hatchery produced spat, .............................................................................................. 61 Alan J. Power, Leslie Sturmer, Cheryl Lucas, Randal L. Walker and Justin Manley Gametogenic cycle of the ponderous ark, Noetia ponderosa (Say, 1822), from Cedar Key, Florida., .... 69 Thomas W. Bates and David W. Hicks Locomotory behavior and habitat selection in littoral gastropods on Caribbean limestone shores, ........ 75 Ludwig C. A. Naegel The effect of periodically “milking? to obtain tyrian purple from Plicopurpura pansa (Gould, 1853) on the frequency of expulsion and mortality, ................................................................................................. 85 P. Supanopas, P. Sretarugsa, M. Kruatrachue, P. Pokethitiyook and E. S. Upatham Acute and subchronic toxicity of lead to the spotted babylon, Babylonia areolata (neogastropoda, buccinidae), ............................................................................................................................................... 91 Sang-Min Lee and Tae-Jun Lim Effects of dietary protein and energy levels on growth and lipid composition of juvenile snail (Semisulcospira gottschei), ....................................................................................................................... 99 Cindi A. Hoover and Patrick M. Gaffney Geographic variation in nuclear genes of the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica gmelin, ................ 103 Andre L. Mallet, Claire E. Carver and Jean-Yves Daigle The effect of peat moss particles on the physiology of the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, ........ 113 Norman Mercado-Silva Condition index of the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin, 1791) in Sapelo Island Georgia—effects of site, position on bed and pea crab parasitism, ....................................................... 121 S. Gregory Tolley, Aswani K. Volety and Michael Savarese Influence of salinity on the habitat use of oyster reefs in three southwest Florida estuaries, ................ 127 Helen Woods, William J. Hargis Jr., Carl H. Hershner and Pam Mason Disappearance of the natural emergent 3-dimensional oyster reef system of the James River, Virginia, 1871–1948, ............................................................................................................................... 139 V. G. Encomio, S. M. Stickler, S. K. Allen, Jr. and F-L. Chu Performance of “natural dermo-resistant? oyster stocks—survival, disease, growth, condition and energy reserves, ..................................................................................................................................... 143 C. Wilson, L. Scotto, J. Scarpa, A. Volety, S. Laramore and D. Haunert Survey of water quality, oyster reproduction and oyster health status in the St. Lucie estuary, ............ 157 Vincent G. Encomio and Fu-Lin. E. Chu Seasonal variation of heat shock protein 70 in eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) infected with Perkinsus marinus (Dermo), ................................................................................................................... 167 Michael Goedken, Brenda Morsey, Inke Sunila, Christopher Dungan and Sylvain de Guise The effects of temperature and salinity on apoptosis of Crassostrea virginica hemocytes and Perkinsus marinus, ................................................................................................................................. 177 Marcial Villalejo-Fuerte, Ma. del Socorro Muneton-Gomez, Ismael Garate-Lizarraga and Federico Garcia-Dominguez Gut content, phytoplankton abundance and reproductive season in the black oyster (Hyotissa hyotis, Linne, 1758) at Isla Espiritu Santo, Gulf of California, ................................................................ 185 C. Castanos, M. S. Pascual, I. Agulleiro, E. Zampatti and M. Elvira Brooding pattern and larval production in wild stocks of the puelche oyster, Ostrea puelchana D’orbigny , ............................................................................................................................................... 191

Page 46: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

46

Patrick Soletchnik, Christophe Lambert and Katherine Costil Summer Mortality of Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg) in relation to environmental rearing conditions, ... 197 Woo-Geon Jeong and Sang-Man Cho The effects of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon exposure on the fertilization and larval development of the pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, ................................................................................................. 209 Pedro E. Saucedo, Horacio Bervera-Leon, Mario Monteforte, Paul C. Southgate and Pablo Monsalvo-Spencer Factors influencing recruitment of hatchery reared pearl oyster (Pinctada Mazatlanica; Hanley 1856) spat, ........................................................................................................................................................ 215 Curt L. Elderkin and Paul L. Klerks Variation in thermal tolerance among three Mississippi river populations of the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, ........................................................................................................................... 221 Ralph Elston, Edwin W. Cake, Jr., Karen Humphrey, Wayne C. Isphording and J. E. (Jack) Rensel Dioxin and heavy-metal contamination of shellfish and sediments in St. Louis Bay, Mississippi and adjacent marine Waters, ......................................................................................................................... 227 M. Santhana Ramasamy and A. Murugan Potential antimicrobial activity of marine molluscs from tuticorin, southeast coast of India against 40 biofilm bacteria, ....................................................................................................................................... 243 Chet F. Rakocinski and Donna Drury McCall Early blue crab recruitment to alternative nursery habitats in Mississippi, USA, ................................... 253 M. Brandon Jones and Charles E. Epifanio Patches of crab megalopae in the mouth of Delaware Bay—an analysis of spatial scales, .................. 261 Desmond M. Kahn and Thomas E. Helser Abundance, dynamics and mortality rates of the Delaware Bay stock of blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, ................................................................................................................................................... 269 Cara Reville, Jennifer Al-Beik, Dawn Meehan-Meola, Zhenkang Xu, Michele L. Goldsmith, William Rand, and Acacia Alcivar-Warren White spot syndrome virus in frozen shrimp sold at Massachusetts supermarkets, .............................. 285 Jason S. Dunham, Ken H. Fong and James A. Boutillier Humpback shrimp biology in a central coast inlet, British Columbia, Canada, ...................................... 291 J. J. Beseres, A. L. Lawrence and R. J. Feller Variation in fiber, protein, and lipid content of shrimp feed—effects on gut passage times measured in the field, ............................................................................................................................................... 301 Abstracts of technical papers presented at the 7th International Conference on Shellfish Restoration, Charleston, South Carolina, November 16–20, 2004, ....................................................... 309 JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 24, No. 2, August 2005. Angela K Dukeman, Norman J Blake and William S Arnold The reproductive cycle of the flame scallop, Ctenoides scaber (Born 1778), from the lower Florida Keys and its relationship with environmental conditions, ....................................................................... 341 Lucelly M Roldan-Carrillo, Alfonso N Maeda-Martinez, Antonio Masso-Rojas and Maria Teresa Sicard-Gonzalez Salinity tolerance and resistance of the Pacific lion’s paw scallop (Nodipecten subnodosus) and the relationships with species distribution and density in a coastal lagoon, ................................................. 353 J P De La Roche, A Louro and G Roman Settlement of Chlamys varia (l.) in the hatchery, .................................................................................... 363 Karin B Lohrmann and Elisabeth Von Brand Histological study of gonads in triploid scallops, Argopecten purpuratus, ............................................. 369 Samia Sarkis, Anne Boettcher, Nobuo Ueda and Claudia Hohn A simple transport procedure for juvenile calico scallops, Argopecten gibbus (Linnaeus, 1758), ......... 377

Page 47: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

47

Juliana M Harding and Roger Mann Veined rapa whelk (Rapana venosa) range extensions in the Virginia waters of Chesapeake Bay, USA, ........................................................................................................................................................ 381 Robert Glazer A model for decoupling emigration from mortality in recapture surveys of slow-moving benthic marine gastropods, ................................................................................................................................. 387 Richard McGarvey, Karen Byth, Cameron D Dixon, Robert W Day and John E Feenstra Field trials and simulations of point-nearest-neighbor distance methods for estimating abalone density, .................................................................................................................................................... 393 Miriam Jazmin Carbajal-Miranda, M Del Pilar Sanchez-Saavedra and Jorge Arturo Simental Effect of monospecific and mixed benthic diatom cultures on the growth of red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) postlarvae (Swainson 1822), ................................................................................................ 401 Mark A Grubert, Craig N Mundy and Arthur J Ritar The effects of sperm density and gamete contact time on the fertilization success of blacklip (Haliotis rubra; Leach, 1814) and greenlip (H. Laevigata; Donovan, 1808) abalone, ............................ 407 Liliana Salinas-Flores, Carmen G Paniagua-Chavez, Jill A Jenkins and Terrence R Tiersch Cryopreservation of sperm of red abalone (Haliotis rufescens), ............................................................ 415 Ludwig C A Naegel and Jesus I Murillo Alvarez Biological and chemical properties of the secretion from the hypobranchial gland of the purple snail, Plicopurpura pansa (Gould, 1853), ......................................................................................................... 421 Dennis Hedgecock, Patrick M Gaffney, Philippe Goulletquer, Ximing Guo, Kimberly Reece and Gregory W Warr The case for sequencing the Pacific oyster genome, ............................................................................. 429 T B Robinson, C L Griffiths, A Tonin, P Bloomer and M P Hare Naturalized populations of Crassostrea gigas along the South African coast: distribution, abundance and population structure, ........................................................................................................................ 443 Woo-Geon Jeong and Sang-Man Cho Effects of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons on hemocyte characteristics of the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, .................................................................................................................................. 451 Ana Matus De La Parra, Oscar Garci´a and Fuencisla San Juan Seasonal variations on the biochemical composition and lipid classes of the gonadal and storage tissues of Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg, 1794) in relation to the gametogenic cycle, ........................... 457 Eric N Powell, Jeffrey J Gendek and Kathryn A Ashton-Alcox Fisherman choice and incidental catch: size frequency of oyster landings in the New Jersey oyster fishery, .................................................................................................................................................... 469 Percy J Jordan and Lewis E Deaton Characterization of phenoloxidase from Crassostrea virginica hemocytes and the effect of Perkinsus marinus on phenoloxidase activity in the hemolymph of Crassostrea virginica and Geukensia demissa, ............................................................................................................................... 477 Thomas M Soniat and Gabriel M Burton A comparison of the effectiveness of sandstone and limestone as cultch for oysters, Crassostrea virginica, .................................................................................................................................................. 483 Michael Goedken, Brenda Morsey, Inke Sunila and Sylvain De Guise Immunomodulation of Crassostrea gigas and Crassostrea virginica cellular defense mechanisms by Perkinsus marinus, ................................................................................................................................. 487 Melanie J. Bishop and Charles H. Peterson Consumer rating of the Suminoe oyster, Crassostrea ariakensis, during home cooking, ..................... 497 I M Sokolova, L Leamy, M Harrison and J D Oliver Intrapopulational variation in Vibrio vulnificus levels in Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin 1971) is associated with the host size but not with disease status or developmental stability, ........................... 503 Roger Mann, Juliana M Harding, Melissa J Southworth and James A Wesson

Page 48: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

48

Northern quahog (hard clam) Mercenaria mercenaria abundance and habitat use in Chesapeake Bay, ......................................................................................................................................................... 509 Eric N Powell and Roger Mann Evidence of recent recruitment in the ocean quahog Arctica islandica in the Mid-Atlantic Bight, .......... 517 M P Sua´rez, C Alvarez, P Molist and F San Juan Particular aspects of gonadal cycle and seasonal distribution of gametogenic stages of Mytilus galloprovincialis, cultured in the estuary of Vigo, .................................................................................... 531 D Hernandez, L Schejter and C Bremec Estimation of total gut contents in bivalves from two stage sampling , .................................................. 541 Valerie Moreau, Rejean Tremblay and Edwin Bourget Distribution of Mytilus edulis and M. trossulus on the Gaspe´ Coast in relation to spatial scale, .......... 545 Alexander Y Karatayev, Robert G Howells, Lyubov E Burlakova and Brian D Sewell History of spread and current distribution of Corbicula fluminea (Muller) in Texas , .............................. 553 Benni Winding Hansen and Jens Borggaard Larson Spatial distribution of velichonch larvae (Bivalvia) identified by SSNM-PCR, pp 561 Amy L Moran and Peter B Marko A simple technique for physical marking of larvae of marine bivalves, .................................................. 567 Clifford E Starliper Quarantine of Aeromonas salmonicida-harboring ebonyshell mussels (Fusconaia ebena) prevents transmission of the pathogen to brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), ....................................................... 573 Gilles Miron, Dominique Audet, Thomas Landry and Mikio Moriyasu Predation potential of the invasive green crab (Carcinus maenas) and other common predators on commercial bivalve species found on Prince Edward Island, ................................................................. 579 Richard B Forward, Jr, Jonathan H Cohen, Michael Z Darnell and Anna Saal The circatidal rhythm in vertical swimming of female blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, during their spawning migration: a reconsideration, .................................................................................................. 587 Susan Park, Charles E Epifanio and Raymond B Iglay Patterns of larval release by the Asian shore crab Hemigrapsus sanguineus (De Haan): periodicity at diel and tidal frequencies, ................................................................................................................... 591 Eugenio Alberto Aragon-Noriega Reproductive output of the blue shrimp, Litopenaeus stylirostris (Decapoda: Penaeidae) in the Gulf of California coast at Agiabampo, Sonora-Sinaloa, Mexico, .................................................................. 597 A Locke, G J Klassen, R Bernier and V Joseph Life history of the sand shrimp, Crangon septemspinosa Say, in a southern Gulf of St Lawrence estuary, ................................................................................................................................................... 603 Abstracts of technical papers presented at the 58th Annual Meeting of the National Shellfisheries Association (Pacific Coast section) & Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association, Tacoma, Washington, October 12–15, 2004, ........................................................................................................ 615 Abstracts of technical papers presented at the 97th Annual Meeting of the National Shellfisheries Association (Pacific Coast Section) & Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association, of the National Shellfisheries Association, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 10–14, 2005, ........................................... 662 JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 24, No. 3, October 2005. Contributions to the Long Island Sound Lobster Research Initiative, 2001–2004, ................................ 687 Jack Pearce and Nancy Balcom The 1999 Long Island Sound lobster mortality event: Findings of the Comprehensive Research Initiative, .................................................................................................................................................. 691 Robert S Anderson and Amy E Beaven In vitro activation of hemocytes from the American lobster, Homarus americanus, as measured by production of reactive oxygen species, .................................................................................................. 699

Page 49: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

49

Sylvain De Guise, Brenda Morsey, Jennifer Maratea, Michael Goedken, Inga Sidor and Jaimes Atherton Development of assays to evaluate cellular immune functions in the American lobster (Homarus americanus), ........................................................................................................................................... 705 Jan Robert Factor, Kelly Orban, Donald H Szarowski, Gang Lin, Timothy Larocca, Amanda Becker and Karen Jacoff-Kapusta A method for assessing removal of foreign particles from the blood by fixed phagocytes of the American lobster, Homarus americanus, ............................................................................................... 713 Thomas E Mullen, Kathleen R Nevis, Charles J O’Kelly, Rebecca J Gast and Salvatore Frasca Jr. Nuclear small-subunit ribosomal RNA gene-based characterization, molecular phylogeny and PCR detection of the Neoparamoeba from western Long Island Sound lobster, ........................................... 719 Senjie Lin and Huan Zhang Isolation of mitochondrial cytochrome B gene and development of a real-time quantitative PCR assay for detecting Neoparamoeba aestuarina, ..................................................................................... 733 Andrei Y Chistoserdov, Roxanna Smolowitz, Feliza Mirasol and Andrea Hsu Culture-dependent characterization of the microbial community associated with epizootic shell disease lesions in American lobster, Homarus americanus, .................................................................. 741 Roxanna Smolowitz, Andrei Y Chistoserdov and Andrea Hsu A description of the pathology of epizootic shell disease in the American lobster, Homarus americanus, H. Milne Edwards 1837, ..................................................................................................... 749 Hans Laufer, Neslihan Demir and William J Biggers Response of the American lobster to the stress of shell disease, .......................................................... 757 Alistair D M Dove, Bassem Allam, Jason J Powers and Mark S Sokolowski A prolonged thermal stress experiment on the American lobster, Homarus americanus, ..................... 761 Daniel Wieczorek and Andrew F J Draxler A method for exposing lobsters to multiple simulated habitat biogeochemicals and temperatures........ 767 Richard A Robohm, Andrew F J Draxler, Daniel Wieczorek, Diane Kapareiko and Steven Pitchford Effects of environmental stressors on disease susceptibility in American lobsters: A controlled laboratory study, ..................................................................................................................................... 773 Sylvain De Guise, Jennifer Maratea, Ernest S Chang and Christopher Perkins Resmethrin immunotoxicity and endocrine disrupting effects in the American lobster (Homarus americanus) upon experimental exposure, ............................................................................................ 781 Anna N Walker, Parshall Bush, Thomas Wilson, Ernest S Chang, Tim Miller and Michael N Horst Metabolic effects of acute exposure to methoprene in the American lobster, Homarus americanus, ... 787 Ann M Zulkosky, Joseph P Ruggieri, Stephen A Terracciano, Bruce J Brownawell and Anne E McElroy Acute toxicity of resmethrin, malathion and methoprene to larval and juvenile American lobsters (Homarus americanus) and analysis of pesticide levels in surface waters after Scourge™, Anvil™ and Altosid™ application, ....................................................................................................................... 795 Carmela Cuomo, Raymond Valente and Deren Dogru Seasonal variations in sediment and bottom water chemistry of western Long Island Sound: Implications for lobster mortality, ............................................................................................................ 805 Andrew F J Draxler, Robert M Sherrell, Daniel Wieczorek, Michele G Lavigne and Anthony J Paulson Manganese concentration in lobster (Homarus americanus) gills as an index of exposure to reducing conditions in eastern Long Island Sound, ................................................................................ 815 Andrew F J Draxler, Richard A Robohm, Daniel Wieczorek, Diane Kapareiko and Steven Pitchford Effect of habitat biogeochemicals on survival of lobsters (Homarus americanus), ................................ 821 Robert E Wilson and Robert L Swanson A perspective on bottom water temperature anomalies in Long Island Sound during the 1999 lobster mortality event, ........................................................................................................................................ 825 Joseph F Crivello, Donald F Landers Jr and Milan Keser

Page 50: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

50

The contribution of egg-bearing female American lobster (Homarus americanus) populations to lobster larvae collected in Long Island Sound by comparison of microsatellite allele frequencies, ....... 831 Joseph F Crivello, Donald F Landers Jr and Milan Keser The genetic stock structure of the American lobster (Homarus americanus) in Long Island Sound and the Hudson Canyon, ........................................................................................................................ 841 Penelope Howell, Jacqueline Benway, Colleen Giannini, Kim McKown, Robyn Burgess and Jed Hayden Long-term population trends in American lobster (Homarus americanus) and their relation to temperature in Long Island Sound, ........................................................................................................ 849 Robin E Landeck Miller, James R Wands, Karen N Chytalo and Richard A D’Amico Application of water quality modeling technology to investigate the mortality of lobsters (Homarus americanus) in western Long Island Sound during the summer of 1999, .............................................. 859 Robert E Wilson, Heather A Crowley, Bruce J Brownawell and Robert L Swanson Simulations of transient pesticide concentrations in Long Island Sound for late summer 1999 with a high resolution coastal circulation model, ............................................................................................... 865 JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 24, No. 4, December 2005. Nicola´s L. Gutie´rrez and Omar Defeo Spatial patterns in population dynamics of the scallop Psychrochlamys patagonica at the northern edge of its range, ................................................................................................................................... 877. William S. Arnold, Norman J. Blake, Melissa M. Harrison, Dan C. Marelli, Melanie L. Parker, Sarah C. Peters and Don E. Sweat Restoration of bay scallop (Argopecten irradians (Lamarck)) populations in Florida coastal waters: Planting techniques and the growth, mortality and reproductive development of planted scallops, ..... 883. Pierre-Gildas Fleury, Xavier Janssoone, Madeleine Nadeau and Helga Guderley Force production during escape responses: Sequential recruitment of the phasic and tonic portions of the adductor muscle in juvenile sea scallop, Placopecten magellanicus (Gmelin), .......................... 905. EE-Yung Chung, Young-JE Park, Jeong-Yong Lee and Dong-KI Ryu Germ cell differentiation and sexual maturation of the hanging cultured female scallop Patinopecten yessoensis on the east coast of Korea, ................................................................................................. 913. A. I. Campa-Cordova, A. Luna-Gonzalez, M. Zarain-Herzberg and C. J. Caceres-Martinez Prophylactic use of antibiotics in larval culture of Argopecten ventricosus (Sowerby, 1835), .............. 923. Weizhu Zhang, Xinzhong Wu, Jingfeng Sun and Dengfeng Li Morphological and functional characterization of the hemocytes of the scallop, Chlamys farreri, ........ 931. John Slater Morphological identification of larval king scallops, Pecten maximus (L.) from natural plankton samples, ................................................................................................................................................. 937. John Slater Spawning of king scallops, Pecten maximus (L.) in Mulroy Bay and the relationship with spatfall intensity, ................................................................................................................................................. 951. Yongping Wang, Zhe Xu and Ximing Guo Chromosomal mapping of 5S ribosomal RNA genes in the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica Gmelin by fluorescence in situ hybridization, ........................................................................................ 959. Lisa M. Wall, Linda J. Walters, Raymond E. Grizzle and Paul E. Sacks Recreational boating activity and its impact on the recruitment and survival of the oyster Crassostrea virginica on intertidal reefs in Mosquito Lagoon, Florida, pp 965. Sonia Rodriguez-Astudillo, Marcial Villalejo-Fuerte, Federico Garcia-Dominguez Y Rafael Guerrero-Caballero Biochemical composition and its relationship with the gonadal index of the black oyster Hyotissa hyotis (Linnaeus, 1758) at Espiritu Santo Gulf of California, ................................................................... 975

Page 51: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

51

Mark D. Camara, Stephen M. Griffith and Sanford Evans III Can selective breeding reduce the heavy metals content of Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas), and are there trade-offs with growth or survival?, ......................................................................................... 979 Gabriela Duprat-Bertazzi and Federico Garcia-Dominguez Reproductive cycle of the rock oyster Hyotissa hyotis (Linne´, 1758) (Griphaeidae) at the La Ballena Island, Gulf of California, Mexico, .......................................................................................................... 987. Melanie J. Bishop and Charles H. Peterson Constraints to Crassostrea ariakensis aquaculture: Season and method of culture strongly influence success of grow-out., ............................................................................................................................. 994. S. Gregory Tolley and Aswani K. Volety The role of oysters in habitat use of oyster reefs by resident fishes and decapod crustaceans, ........ 1007. Deenie M. Bugge and Bassem Allam A fluorometric technique for the in vitro measurement of growth and viability in quahog parasite unknown (QPX), .................................................................................................................................. 1013. S. A. Lynch, D. V. Armitage, S. Wylde, M. F. Mulcahy and S. C. Culloty The susceptibility of young prespawning oysters, Ostrea edulis, to Bonamia ostreae, ...................... 1019. Gwynne D. Brown, Stephen L. Kaattari and Kimberly S. Reece Effect of homogenate from different oyster species on Perkinsus marinus proliferation and subtilisin gene transcription, ............................................................................................................................... 1027. Alison Yee, Christopher Dungan, Rosalee Hamilton, Michael Goedken, Sylvain de Guise and Inke Sunila Apoptosis of the protozoan oyster pathogen Perkinsus marinus in vivo and in vitro in the Chesapeake Bay and the Long Island Sound, ..................................................................................... 1035. John N. Kraeuter, Stuart Buckner and Eric N. Powell A note on a spawner—recruit relationship for a heavily exploited bivalve: The case of northern quahogs (hard clams), Mercenaria mercenaria in Great South Bay New York, ................................. 1043. Y. Nakamura, K. Hashizume, K. Koyama and A. Tamaki Effect of salinity on sand burrowing activity, feeding and growth of the clams Mactra veneriformis, Ruditapes philippinarum and Meterix lusoria, ...................................................................................... 1053. Ebru Onal, Chris Langdon and Umur Onal The evaluation of spray-dried microalgae in diets for juvenile manila clams, Tapes philippinarum, ... 1061. Ryogen Nanbu, Etsuko Yokoyama, Tomomi Mizuno and Hideo Sekiguchi Spatio-temporal variations in density of different life stages of a brackish water clam Corbicula japonica in the Kiso Estuaries, central Japan, ...................................................................................... 1067 Kyung-Il Park, Jin-Woo Choi and Kwang-Sik Choi Development of a Saxidomus purpuratus (Mollusca: Bivalvia) egg-specific antibody for the quantification of eggs using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, .............................................. 1079. Bruce J. Barber, Jonathan S. Fajans, Shirley M. Baker and Patrick Baker Gametogenesis in the non-native green mussel, Perna viridis, and the native scorched mussel, Brachidontes exustus,in Tampa Bay, Florida, ..................................................................................... 1087. Ivona Mladineo and Melita Peharda Histopathology of Gymnophallus sp. sporocysts in the edible mytilid, Modiolus barbatus, ................ 1097. Claudia Carcamo, Angel S. Comesana, Federico M. Winkler and Andres Sanjuan Allozyme identification of mussels (Bivalvia: Mytilus) on the Pacific Coast of South America, ........... 1101. Jorge E. Toro, Johana A. Ojeda, Ana M. Vergara, Grace C. Castro and Angelica C. Alcapan Molecular characterization of the Chilean blue mussel (Mytilus chilensis Hupe 1854) demonstrates evidence for the occurrence of Mytilus galloprovincialis in southern Chile, ......................................... 1117 Anne A. Boettcher Heat shock induced metamorphosis of the queen conch, Strombus gigas: Comparison with induction by algal associated cues, ..................................................................................................... 1123. Erick Baqueiro Cardenas, Dalila Aldana Aranda and Gisela Mart´inez Olivares

Page 52: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

52

Gonad development and reproductive pattern of the fighting conch Strombus pugilis (Linee´, 1758) (Gastropoda, Prosobranchia) from Campeche, Mexico, ..................................................................... 1127. Juliana Gimenez, Mario Lasta, Gregorio Bigatti and Pablo E. Penchaszadeh Exploitation of the volute snail Zidona dufresnei in Argentine waters, southwestern Atlantic Ocean, 1135. Hirotatsu Fukazawa, Hideki Takami, Tomohiko Kawamura and Yoshiro Watanabe The effect of egg quality on larval period and postlarval survival of an abalone Haliotis discus hannai, ................................................................................................................................................. 1141. Mizuho Sakai, Sei-Ichi Okumura and Kunio Yamamori Telomere analysis of Pacific abalone Haliotis discus hannai chromosomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization, ........................................................................................................................................ 1149. Cristian Gallardo-Escarate, Josue Alvarez-Borrego, Miguel Angel del Rio-Portilla, Elisabeth von Branc-Skopnik, Ismael Cross, Alejandro Merlo and Laureana Rebordinos Karyotype analysis and chromosomal localization by fish of ribosomal DNA, telomeric (TTAGGG)N and (GATA)N repeats in Haliotis fulgens and H. corrugata (Archeogastropoda), ............................... 1153. Cristian Gallardo-Escarate, Josue Alvarez-Borrego, Miguel Angel del Rio-Portilla, Elisabeth von Branc-Skopnik and Mario A. Bueno Analysis of chromosomal DNA content in Pacific red abalone Haliotis rufescens by fluorescence image analysis, .................................................................................................................................... 1161. Lota B. Alcantara and Tadahide Noro Effects of macroalgal type and water temperature on macroalgal consumption rates of the abalone Haliotis diversicolor Reeve, ................................................................................................................. 1169. Jessica Montano-Vargas, Maria Teresa Viana, Louis R. D’Abramo, Armando Shimada and Carlos Vasquez-Pelaez Growth and energy utilization of juvenile pink abalone Haliotis corrugata fed diets containing different levels of protein and two starch:lipid ratios, ........................................................................... 1179. Lauren Lyons, Dean R. Jerry and Paul S. Southgate Cryopreservation of black-lip pearl oyster (Pinctata margaritifera, L.) spermatozoa: Effects of cryoprotectants on spermatozoa motility, ............................................................................................ 1187. Takeo Kurihara, Hideaki Yamada, Jun Nakamori, Motohiko Sano and Hirofumi Shimizu Effects of rearing conditions on growth and survival in juvenile blacklip pearl oyster Pinctada margaritifera (L.) in subtropical Japan, ................................................................................................ 1191. Eliana Gomez-Robles, Carmen Rodriguez-Jaramillo and Pedro E. Saucedo Digital image analysis of lipid and protein histochemical markers for measuring oocyte development and quality in pearl oyster Pinctada mazatlanica (Hanley,1856), ........................................................ 1197. Zhu Jun-Quan, Yang Wan-Xi, You Zhong-Jie and Jiao Hai-Feng The ultrastructure of the spermatozoon of Octopus tankahkeei, ......................................................... 1203. Ines Martinez-Pita, Francisco Garcia and Maria-Luisa Pita Fatty acid composition and utilization in developing eggs of some marine nudibranchs (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Opistobranchia) from southwest Spain, ............................................................................. 209. Yingchun Mu, Fang Want, Shuanglin Dong, Guoqiang Huang and Shaoshuai Dong Effects of salinity fluctuation pattern on growth and energy budget of juvenile Fenneropenaeus chinensis, ............................................................................................................................................. 1217. Pan Lu-Qing, Jiang Ling-Xu and Miao Jing-Jing Effects of salinity and pH on immune parameters of the white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei, ......... 1223. Edison Barbieri, Elisangela A. Passos and Carlos A. B. Garcia Use of metabolism to evaluate the sublethal toxicity of mercury on Farfantepaneus brasiliensis larvae (Latreille 1817, crustacean), ..................................................................................................... 1229. Trine Dale, Sten Ivar Siikavuopio and Kåre Aas Roe enhancement in sea urchin: Effects of handling during harvest and transport on mortality and gonad growth in Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis, .......................................................................... 1235. Kevin A. Nelson, Geoff I. Scott and Philip F. Rust

Page 53: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

53

A multivariable approach for evaluating major impacts on water quality in Murrells and North Inlets, South Carolina, .................................................................................................................................... 1241. Ralph Elston, Edwin W. Cake, Jr., Karen Humphrey, Wayne C. Isphording, Rod O’Connor and J. E. (Jack) Rensel Addendum to: Dioxin and heavy-metal contamination of shellfish and sediments in St. Louis Bay, Mississippi and adjacent marine waters, ............................................................................................. 1253. Abstracts of technical papers presented at the 25th Annual Milford Aquaculture Seminar, Milford, Connecticut, February 28–March 2, 2005, ........................................................................................... 1257. JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH: Vol. 25, No. 1, April 2006. David Garcia Bruce The whelk dredge fishery of Delaware, ....................................................................................................... 1 Yew-Hu Chien and Wen-Hua Hsu Effects of diets, their concentrations and clam size on filtration rate of hard clams (Meretrix lusoria), .... 15 Alexander Y Karatayev, Lyubov E Burlakova, and Dianna K Padilla Growth rate and longevity of Dreissena polymorpha (Pallas): A review and recommendation for future study, .............................................................................................................................................. 23 Kristina M Miller, K Janine Supernault, Shaorong Li, and Ruth E Withler Population structure in two marine invertebrate species (Panopea abrupta and Strongylocentrotus franciscanus) targeted for aquaculture and enhancement in British Columbia, ....................................... 33 Mélanie Bourgeois, Jean-Claude Brêthes and Madeleine Nadeau Substrate effects on survival, growth and dispersal of juvenile sea scallop, Placopecten magellanicus (Gmelin 1791), .................................................................................................................... 43 Pablo E Penchaszadeh, Florencia Arrighetti, Maximiliano Cledón, Juan Pablo Livore, Florencia Botto and Oscar O Iribarne Bivalve contribution to shallow sandy bottom food web off Mar Del Plata (Argentina): inference from stomach contents and stable isotope analysis, ........................................................................................ 51 Jingfeng Sun, Xinzhong Wu and Weizhu Zhang Morphological, structural and functional characteristics of the hemocytes of the oyster, Crassostrea ariakensis, ................................................................................................................................................. 55 Jessica A Moss, Eugene M Burreson and Kimberly S Reece Advanced Perkinsus marinus infections in Crassostrea ariakensis maintained under laboratory conditions, ................................................................................................................................................. 65 Juliana M Harding and Roger Mann Age and growth of wild Suminoe (Crassostrea ariakensis, Fugita 1913) and Pacific (C. gigas, Thunberg 1793) oysters from Laizhou Bay, China, .................................................................................. 73 Thomas M Soniat, John M Klinck, Eric N Powell and Eileen E Hofmann Understanding the success and failure of oyster populations: climatic cycles and Perkinsus marinus, ................................................................................................................................................................... 83 Inna M Sokolova, James D Oliver and Larry J Leamy An AFLP approach to identify genetic markers associated with resistance to Vibrio vulnificus and Perkinsus marinus in eastern oysters, ...................................................................................................... 95 M Carolina Romero, Gustavo A Lovrich and Federico Tapella Seasonal changes in dry mass and energetic content of Munida subrugosa (Crustacea: Decapoda) in the Beagle Channel, Argentina, .......................................................................................................... 101 Chang-Bo Zhu, Shuang-Lin Dong and Fang Wang The interaction of salinity and Na/K ratio in seawater on growth, nutrient retention and food conversion of juvenile Litopenaeus vannamei, ....................................................................................... 107 Boon Liong Ong and Danielle Johnston

Page 54: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

54

Influence of feeding on hepatopancreas structure and digestive enzyme activities in Penaeus monodon, ................................................................................................................................................ 113 Wenceslao Valenzuela-Quin˜ onez, Eugenio Alberto Aragón-Noriega, Dulce Patricia Alvarado-Romero, César Augusto Salinas-Zavala and Alma Rosa García-Juárez Application of an egg production index to determine reproductive period of the brown shrimp Farfantepenaeus californiensis near Agiabampo, Sonora-Sinaloa, Mexico, .......................................... 123 Yvonne M Bogan, David Kennedy, Anne L Harkin, John Gillespie, Philipp Hess and John W Slater Comparison of domoic acid concentrations in King scallops, Pecten maximus from seabed and suspended culture systems, ................................................................................................................... 129 Symposium on Molluscan Fisheries and Aquaculture. Papers presented at the World Congress of Malacology, Perth, Western Australia, July 11–16, 2004, ...................................................................... 137 Fred E Wells and Peter Jernakoff An assessment of the environmental impact of wild harvest pearl aquaculture (Pinctada maxima) in Western Australia, p. 141 Sabine Daume The roles of bacteria and micro- and macro-algae in abalone aquaculture: a review, p. 151 Scott P Gifford, Geoff R MacFarlane, Wayne A O’Connor and R Hugh Dunstan Effect of the pollutants lead, zinc, hexadecane and octocosane on total growth and shell growth in the Akoya pearl oyster, Pinctada imbricate, ........................................................................................... 159 Boze Hancock and Nick Caputi The Roe’s abalone fishery near the Perth metropolitan area, Western Australia, ................................. 167 Scott A Condie, Jim V Mansbridge, Anthony M Hart and John R Andrewartha Transport and recruitment of silver-lip pearl oyster larvae on Australia’s north west shelf, ................... 179 Kylie Freeman, Sabine Daume, Matthew Rowe, Steve Parsons, Ric Lambert and Greg B Maguire Effects of season, temperature control, broodstock conditioning period and handling on incidence of controlled and uncontrolled spawning of greenlip abalone (Haliotis laevigata Donovan) in Western Australia, ................................................................................................................................................. 187 Fiona Graham, Tahryn MacKrill, Mark Davidson and Sabine Daume Influence of conditioning diet and spawning frequency on variation in egg diameter for greenlip abalone, Haliotis laevigata, ..................................................................................................................... 195 Anthony M Hart and Lindsay M Joll Growth, mortality, recruitment and sex-ratio in wild stocks of silver-lipped pearl oyster Pinctada maxima (Jameson) (Mollusca: Pteriidae), in Western Australia, ............................................................ 201 M P Heasman In pursuit of cost-effective fisheries enhancement of New South Wales blacklip-abalone, Haliotis rubra (Leach) fishery, .............................................................................................................................. 211 Daniel J Jackson and Bernard M Degnan Expressed sequence tag analysis of genes expressed during development of the tropical abalone Haliotis asinine, ....................................................................................................................................... 225 J B Jones and J Creeper Diseases of pearl oysters and other molluscs: a Western Australian perspective, ................................ 233 Lachlan W S Strain, Michael A Borowitzka and Sabine Daume Growth and survival of juvenile greenlip abalone (Haliotis laevigata) feeding on germlings of the macroalgae Ulva sp, ............................................................................................................................... 239 Paulo Vasconcelos, Miguel B Gaspar, Alexandre M Pereira and Margarida Castro Growth rate estimation of Hexaplex (Trunculariopsis) Trunculus (Gastropoda: Muricidae) based on mark/recapture experiments in the Ria Formosa Lagoon (Algarve Coast, Southern Portugal), ............ 249 Abstracts of papers presented at the 15th International Pectinid Workshop, Mooloolaba, Australia, April 20–24, 2005, ................................................................................................................................... 257

Page 55: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

55

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY: Vol. 51, No. 3, May 2006. Hoffmann, Linn J., Ilka Peeken, Karin Lochte, Philipp Assmy, and Marcel Veldhuis Different reactions of Southern Ocean phytoplankton size classes to iron fertilization ......................... 1217 Dutz, Jörg, and Marja Koski Trophic significance of solitary cells of the prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis globosa depends on cell type ........................................................................................................................................................ 1230 van de Poll, Willem H., Anne-Carlijn Alderkamp, Paul J. Janknegt, Jan Roggeveld, and Anita G. J. Buma Photoacclimation modulates excessive photosynthetically active and ultraviolet radiation effects in a temperate and an Antarctic marine diatom ............................................................................................ 1239 Rynearson, T. A., J. A. Newton, and E. V. Armbrust Spring bloom development, genetic variation, and population succession in the planktonic diatom Ditylum brightwellii ................................................................................................................................. 1249 Reinthaler, Thomas, Hendrik van Aken, Cornelis Veth, Javier Arístegui, Carol Robinson, Peter J. le B. Williams, Philippe Lebaron, and Gerhard J. Herndl Prokaryotic respiration and production in the meso- and bathypelagic realm of the eastern and western North Atlantic basin .................................................................................................................. 1262 Hewson, Ian, Joshua A. Steele, Douglas G. Capone, and Jed A. Fuhrman Remarkable heterogeneity in meso- and bathypelagic bacterioplankton assemblage composition ..... 1274 Schneider, Kenneth, and Jonathan Erez The effect of carbonate chemistry on calcification and photosynthesis in the hermatypic coral Acropora eurystoma .............................................................................................................................. 1284 McDonald, C. B., J. R. Koseff, and S. G. Monismith Effects of the depth to coral height ratio on drag coefficients for unidirectional flow over coral............ 1294 van Oevelen, Dick, Jack J. Middelburg, Karline Soetaert, and Leon Moodley The fate of bacterial carbon in an intertidal sediment: Modeling an in situ isotope tracer experiment... 1302 de Beer, Dirk, Eberhard Sauter, Helge Niemann, Norbert Kaul, Jean-Paul Foucher, Ursula Witte, Michael Schlüter, and Antje Boetius In situ fluxes and zonation of microbial activity in surface sediments of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano .................................................................................................................................................. 1315 Martin, Jonathan B., Jaye E. Cable, John Jaeger, Kevin Hartl, and Christopher G. Smith Thermal and chemical evidence for rapid water exchange across the sediment-water interface by bioirrigation in the Indian River Lagoon, Florida .................................................................................... 1332 Maerki, Martin, Beat Müller, and Bernhard Wehrli Microscale mineralization pathways in surface sediments: A chemical sensor study in Lake Baikal ... 1342 Ryves, David B., Richard W. Battarbee, Stephen Juggins, Sherilyn C. Fritz, and N. John Anderson Physical and chemical predictors of diatom dissolution in freshwater and saline lake sediments in North America and West Greenland..................................................................................................... 1355- Cullen, Jay T. On the nonlinear relationship between dissolved cadmium and phosphate in the modern global ocean: Could chronic iron limitation of phytoplankton growth cause the kink?..................................... 1369 Dyhrman, Sonya T., and Kathleen C. Ruttenberg Presence and regulation of alkaline phosphatase activity in eukaryotic phytoplankton from the coastal ocean: Implications for dissolved organic phosphorus remineralization ................................... 1381 Nieto-Cid, M., X. A. Álvarez-Salgado, and F. F. Pérez Microbial and photochemical reactivity of fluorescent dissolved organic matter in a coastal upwelling system .................................................................................................................................................... 1391 Breton, Elsa, Véronique Rousseau, Jean-Yves Parent, José Ozer, and Christiane Lancelot Hydroclimatic modulation of diatom/Phaeocystis blooms in nutrient-enriched Belgian coastal waters (North Sea) ............................................................................................................................................ 1401

Page 56: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

56

Valdes-Weaver, Lexia M., Michael F. Piehler, James L. Pinckney, Karin E. Howe, Karen Rossignol, and Hans W. Paerl Long-term temporal and spatial trends in phytoplankton biomass and class-level taxonomic composition in the hydrologically variable Neuse-Pamlico estuarine continuum, North Carolina, U.S.A. ..................................................................................................................................................... 1410 Loh, Ai Ning, James E. Bauer, and Elizabeth A. Canuel Dissolved and particulate organic matter source-age characterization in the upper and lower Chesapeake Bay: A combined isotope and biochemical approach ...................................................... 1421 Sarma, V. V. S. S., O. Abe, A. Hinuma, and T. Saino Short-term variation of triple oxygen isotopes and gross oxygen production in the Sagami Bay, central Japan ......................................................................................................................................... 1432 Gücker, Björn, and Martin T. Pusch Regulation of nutrient uptake in eutrophic lowland streams .................................................................. 1443 Robertson, A. L., and A. M. Milner The influence of stream age and environmental variables in structuring meiofaunal assemblages in recently deglaciated streams.................................................................................................................. 1454 Laforsch, Christian, Laura Beccara, and Ralph Tollrian Inducible defenses: The relevance of chemical alarm cues in Daphnia ............................................... 1466 Barnard, Christine, Christine Martineau, Jean-Jacques Frenette, Julian J. Dodson, and Warwick F. Vincent Trophic position of zebra mussel veligers and their use of dissolved organic carbon .......................... 1473 Gaudette, Julien, Richard A. Wahle, and John H. Himmelman Spawning events in small and large populations of the green sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis as recorded using fertilization assays .......................................................................... 1485 Houel, Stephane, Patrick Louchouarn, Marc Lucotte, Rene Canuel, and Bassam Ghaleb Translocation of soil organic matter following reservoir impoundment in boreal systems: Implications for in situ productivity ............................................................................................................................. 1497 McIntyre, Peter B., Ellinor Michel, and Michelle Olsgard Top-down and bottom-up controls on periphyton biomass and productivity in Lake Tanganyika......... 1514 Graham, Mark D., Rolf D. Vinebrooke, and Michael Turner Coupling of boreal forests and lakes: Effects of conifer pollen on littoral communities ......................... 1524 Tartarotti, Barbara, and Ruben Sommaruga Seasonal and ontogenetic changes of mycosporine-like amino acids in planktonic organisms from an alpine lake......................................................................................................................................... 1530 Notes García-Roger, Eduardo M., María José Carmona, and Manuel Serra A simple model relating habitat features to a diapause egg bank......................................................... 1542 Hadas, Eran, Dominique Marie, Muki Shpigel, and Micha Ilan Virus predation by sponges is a new nutrient-flow pathway in coral reef food webs ............................ 1548 Nurminen, Leena, and Jukka Horppila Efficiency of fish feeding on plant-attached prey: Effects of inorganic turbidity and plant-mediated changes in the light environment........................................................................................................... 1550 MARINE BIOLOGY RESEARCH (Formerly Sarsia and Ophelia): Vol. 2, No. 1, 2006. The potential role of microzooplankton in a northwestern Australian pelagic food C. M. Moritz, D. Montagnes, J. H. Carleton, D, Wilson &A. D. McKinnon............................................................................. 1 Distribution, abundance, biology and biochemistry of the stout bobtail squid Rossia macrosoma from the Portuguese coast R. Rosa, J. Pereira, P. R. Costa & M. L. Nunes......................................................................................... 14

Page 57: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

57

The combined effect of canopy shading and sea urchin grazing on recruitment in kelp forest (Laminaria hyperborea) Kjersti Sjotun, Hartvig Christie & Jan Helge Fossá .................................................................................... 24 Motile behaviour of the bloom-forming ciliate Mesodinium rubrum Tom Fenchel & Per Juel Hansen ............................................................................................................... 33 Viral activity along a trophic gradient in continental margin sediments off central Chile Mathias Middelboe & Ronnie N. Glud ...................................................................................................... 41 Differences in the condition of Norway lobsters (Nephrops norvegicus) from trawled and creeled fishing areas Susanne P. Eriksson .......................................................................................................... 52 Growth and reproduction in the Icelandic common seal (Phoca vitulina L., 1758) Erlingur Hauksson ..... 59 Book Reviews ............................................................................................................................................. 74 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 311, April 13, 2006. Kaiser MJ, Clarke KR, Hinz H, Austen MCV, Somerfield PJ, Karakassis I Global analysis of response and recovery of benthic biota to fishing...................................................... 1-14 RESEARCH ARTICLES Tuya F, Haroun RJ Spatial patterns and response to wave exposure of shallow water algal assemblages across the Canarian Archipelago: a multi-scaled approach.................................................................................... 15-28 Sedlacek L, Thistle D Emergence on the continental shelf: differences among species and between microhabitats............. 29-36 Melrose DC, Oviatt CA, O’Reilly JE, Berman MS Comparisons of fast repetition rate fluorescence estimated primary production and 14C uptake by phytoplankton......................................................................................................................................... 37-46 Guizien K, Brochier T, Duchêne JC, Koh BS, Marsaleix P Dispersal of Owenia fusiformis larvae by wind-driven currents: turbulence, swimming behaviour and mortality in a three-dimensional stochastic model................................................................................. 47-66 Hewson I, Steele JA, Capone DG, Fuhrman JA Temporal and spatial scales of variation in bacterioplankton assemblages of oligotrophic surface waters .................................................................................................................................................... 67-77 Bell JJ, Burton M, Bullimore B, Newman PB, Lock K Morphological monitoring of subtidal sponge assemblages.................................................................. 79-91 Zakai D, Dubinsky Z, Avishai A, Caaras T, Chadwick NE Lunar periodicity of planula release in the reef-building coral Stylophora pistillata............................. 93-102 Piola RF, Johnston EL Differential resistance to extended copper exposure in four introduced bryozoans.......................... 103-114 Turner JT, Borkman DG, Hunt CD Zooplankton of Massachusetts Bay, USA, 1992-2003: relationships between the copepod Calanus finmarchicus and the North Atlantic Oscillation ................................................................................. 115-124 Walther BD, Thorrold SR Water, not food, contributes the majority of strontium and barium deposited in the otoliths of a marine fish ......................................................................................................................................... 125-130 Rouleau C, Gobeil C, Tjälve H Cadmium accumulation in coastal demersal fish .............................................................................. 131-143 Bertrand A, Barbieri MA, Gerlotto F, Leiva F, Córdova J Determinism and plasticity of fish schooling behaviour as exemplified by the South Pacific jack mackerel Trachurus murphyi ............................................................................................................. 145-156 Bearhop S, Phillips RA, McGill R, Cherel Y, Dawson DA, Croxall JP Stable isotopes indicate sex-specific and long-term individual foraging specialisation in diving seabirds ............................................................................................................................................. 157-164

Page 58: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

58

Ruchonnet D, Boutoute M, Guinet C, Mayzaud P Fatty acid composition of Mediterranean fin whale Balaenoptera physalus blubber with respect to body heterogeneity and trophic interaction........................................................................................ 165-174 THEME SECTION Marine biodiversity and ecosystem function: empirical approaches and future research needs Idea and coordination: Solan M, Raffaelli DG, Paterson DM, White PCL, Pierce GJ Solan M, Raffaelli DG, Paterson DM, White PCL, Pierce GJ Introduction ........................................................................................................................................ 175-178 Duffy JE, Stachowicz JJ Why biodiversity is important to oceanography: potential roles of genetic, species, and trophic diversity in pelagic ecosystem processes.......................................................................................... 179-189 Forster RM, Créach V, Sabbe K, Vyverman W, Stal LJ Biodiversity-ecosystem function relationship in microphytobenthic diatoms of the Westerschelde estuary ............................................................................................................................................... 191-201 Ruesink JL, Feist BE, Harvey CJ, Hong JS, Trimble AC, Wisehart LM Changes in productivity associated with four introduced species: ecosystem transformation of a ‘pristine’ estuary................................................................................................................................. 203-215 Waldbusser GG, Marinelli RL Macrofaunal modification of porewater advection: role of species function, species interaction, and kinetics ............................................................................................................................................... 217-231 Duffy JE Biodiversity and the functioning of seagrass ecosystems................................................................. 233-250 Stachowicz JJ, Byrnes JE Species diversity, invasion success, and ecosystem functioning: disentangling the influence of resource competition, facilitation, and extrinsic factors ..................................................................... 251-262 Ieno EN, Solan M, Batty P, Pierce GJ How biodiversity effects ecosystem functioning: roles of infaunal species richness, identity and density in the marine benthos............................................................................................................ 263-271 Naeem S Expanding scales in biodiversity-based research: challenges and solutions for marine systems .... 273-283 Raffaelli D Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning: issues of scale and trophic complexity.............................. 285-294 Bulling MT, White PCL, Raffaelli D, Pierce GJ Using model systems to address the biodiversity-ecosystem functioning process........................... 295-309 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 312, April 24, 2006. Cornelisen CD, Thomas FIM Water flow enhances ammonium and nitrate uptake in a seagrass community ..................................... 1-13 RESEARCH ARTICLES Meziane T, d’Agata F, Lee SY Fate of mangrove organic matter along a subtropical estuary: small-scale exportation and contribution to the food of crab communities......................................................................................... 15-27 Stutes AL, Cebrian J, Corcoran AA Effects of nutrient enrichment and shading on sediment primary production and metabolism in eutrophic estuaries ................................................................................................................................ 29-43 Murphy RJ, Underwood AJ, Pinkerton MH Quantitative imaging to measure photosynthetic biomass on an intertidal rock-platform ..................... 45-55 Leterme SC, Seuront L, Edwards M Differential contribution of diatoms and dinoflagellates to phytoplankton biomass in the NE Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea ...................................................................................................................... 57-65

Page 59: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

59

Taylor GT, Gobler CJ, Sañudo-Wilhelmy SA Speciation and concentrations of dissolved nitrogen as determinants of brown tide Aureococcus anophagefferens bloom initiation........................................................................................................... 67-83 Koh CH, Khim JS, Araki H, Yamanishi H, Mogi H, Koga K Tidal resuspension of microphytobenthic chlorophyll a in a Nanaura mudflat, Saga, Ariake Sea, Japan: flood-ebb and spring-neap variations ...................................................................................... 85-100 Wang X, Wang WX Bioaccumulation and transfer of benzo(a)pyrene in a simplified marine food chain......................... 101-111 López-Victoria M, Zea S, Weil E Competition for space between encrusting excavating Caribbean sponges and other coral reef organisms .......................................................................................................................................... 113-121 Brock JC, Yates KK, Halley RB, Kuffner IB, Wright CW, Hatcher BG Northern Florida reef tract benthic metabolism scaled by remote sensing ....................................... 123-139 Keppler CJ, Lewitus AJ, Ringwood AH, Hoguet J, Staton T Sublethal cellular effects of short-term raphidophyte and brevetoxin exposures on the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica .............................................................................................................. 141-147 Botello G, Krug PJ ‘Desperate larvae’ revisited: age, energy and experience affect sensitivity to settlement cues in larvae of the gastropod Alderia sp. .................................................................................................... 149-159 Neulinger SC, Sahling H, Süling J, Imhoff JF Presence of two phylogenetically distinct groups in the deep-sea mussel Acharax (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Solemyidae) ........................................................................................................................ 161-168 Bargu S, Lefebvre K, Silver MW Effect of dissolved domoic acid on the grazing rate of krill Euphausia pacifica ................................ 169-175 Calliari D, Andersen CM, Thor P, Gorokhova E, Tiselius P Salinity modulates the energy balance and reproductive success of co-occurring copepods Acartia tonsa and A. clausi in different ways ................................................................................................. 177-188 Sato T, Ashidate M, Jinbo T, Goshima S Variation of sperm allocation with male size and recovery rate of sperm numbers in spiny king crab Paralithodes brevipes ........................................................................................................................ 189-199 Botto F, Iribarne O, Gutierrez J, Bava J, Gagliardini A, Valiela I Ecological importance of passive deposition of organic matter into burrows of the SW Atlantic crab Chasmagnathus granulatus............................................................................................................... 201-210 Duncan KM, Holland KN Habitat use, growth rates and dispersal patterns of juvenile scalloped hammerhead sharks Sphyrna lewini in a nursery habitat .................................................................................................................. 211-221 York PH, Booth DJ, Glasby TM, Pease BC Fish assemblages in habitats dominated by Caulerpa taxifolia and native seagrasses in south-eastern Australia ................................................................................................................................ 223-234 Polte P, Asmus H Intertidal seagrass beds (Zostera noltii) as spawning grounds for transient fishes in the Wadden Sea..................................................................................................................................................... 235-243 Llanos-Rivera A, Castro LR Inter-population differences in temperature effects on Engraulis ringens yolk-sac larvae ................ 245-253 Chen HL, Tzeng WN Daily growth increment formation in otoliths of Pacific tarpon Megalops cyprinoides during metamorphosis .................................................................................................................................. 255-263 Frid A, Baker GG, Dill LM Do resource declines increase predation rates on North Pacific harbor seals? A behavior-based plausibility model ............................................................................................................................... 265-275 Soto KH, Trites AW, Arias-Schreiber M

Page 60: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

60

Changes in diet and maternal attendance of South American sea lions indicate changes in the marine environment and prey abundance......................................................................................... 277-290 NOTE Dahlgren CP, Kellison GT, Adams AJ, Gillanders BM, Kendall MS, Layman CA, Ley JA, Nagelkerken I, Serafy JE Marine nurseries and effective juvenile habitats: concepts and applications.................................... 291-295 AS WE SEE IT Culverhouse PF, Williams R, Benfield M, Flood PR, Sell AF, Mazzocchi MG, Buttino I, Sieracki M Automatic image analysis of plankton: future perspectives............................................................... 297-309 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 313, May 11, 2006. Hoogenboom MO, Anthony KRN, Connolly SR Energetic cost of photoinhibition in corals ............................................................................................... 1-12 RESEARCH ARTICLES Ichinokawa M, Takahashi MM Size-dependent carbon flow in the epipelagic food web of the Western Equatorial Pacific.................. 13-26 Byers JE, Pringle JM Going against the flow: retention, range limits and invasions in advective environments..................... 27-41 Borja Á, Muxika I, Franco J Long-term recovery of soft-bottom benthos following urban and industrial sewage treatment in the Nervión estuary (southern Bay of Biscay) ............................................................................................. 43-55 Longhi ML, Ferreyra G, Schloss I, Roy S Variable phytoplankton response to enhanced UV-B and nitrate addition in mesocosm experiments at three latitudes (Canada, Brazil and Argentina).................................................................................. 57-72 Henson SA, Sanders R, Holeton C, Allen JT Timing of nutrient depletion, diatom dominance and a lower-boundary estimate of export production for Irminger Basin, North Atlantic........................................................................................................... 73-84 Sánchez Í, Fernández C Resource availability and invasibility in an intertidal macroalgal assemblage ...................................... 85-94 Hereu B Depletion of palatable algae by sea urchins and fishes in a Mediterranean subtidal community....... 95-103 Orth RJ, Kendrick GA, Marion SR Predation on Posidonia australis seeds in seagrass habitats of Rottnest Island, Western Australia: patterns and predators....................................................................................................................... 105-114 Lapid ED, Chadwick NE Long-term effects of competition on coral growth and sweeper tentacle development .................... 115-123 Gilly WF, Elliger CA, Salinas CA, Camarilla-Coop S, Bazzino G, Beman M Spawning by jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas in San Pedro Mártir Basin, Gulf of California, Mexico... 125-133 Byrén L, Ejdung G, Elmgren R Uptake of sedimentary organic matter by the deposit-feeding Baltic amphipods Monoporeia affinis and Pontoporeia femorata ................................................................................................................. 135-143 Finlay K, Roff JC Ontogenetic growth rate responses of temperate marine copepods to chlorophyll concentration and light .................................................................................................................................................... 145-156 Maar M, Visser AW, Nielsen TG, Stips A, Saito H Turbulence and feeding behaviour affect the vertical distributions of Oithona similis and Microsetella norwegica........................................................................................................................................... 157-172 Speirs DC, Gurney WSC, Heath MR, Horbelt W, Wood SN, de Cuevas BA Ocean-scale modelling of the distribution, abundance, and seasonal dynamics of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus ........................................................................................................................ 173-192

Page 61: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

61

Sato T, Goshima S Impacts of male-only fishing and sperm limitation in manipulated populations of an unfished crab, Hapalogaster dentata ........................................................................................................................ 193-204 Armitage AR, Fong P Predation and physical disturbance by crabs reduce the relative impacts of nutrients in a tidal mudflat ............................................................................................................................................... 205-213 Catchpole TL, Frid CLJ, Gray TS Importance of discards from the English Nephrops norvegicus fishery in the North Sea to marine scavengers......................................................................................................................................... 215-226 Griffiths SP, Davis AR, West RJ Role of habitat complexity in structuring temperate rockpool ichthyofaunas .................................... 227-239 Nathan G. Smith, Jones CM Substituting otoliths for chemical analyses: Does sagitta = lapillus? ................................................ 241-247 Rooker JR, Turner JP, Holt SA Trophic ecology of Sargassum-associated fishes in the Gulf of Mexico determined from stable isotopes and fatty acids ..................................................................................................................... 249-259 Sarà G, Scilipoti D, Milazzo M, Modica A Use of stable isotopes to investigate dispersal of waste from fish farms as a function of hydrodynamics................................................................................................................................... 261-270 Abraham CL, Sydeman WJ Prey-switching by Cassin’s auklet Ptychoramphus aleuticus reveals seasonal climate-related cycles of Euphausia pacifica and Thysanoessa spinifera ............................................................................ 271-283 Koschinski S, Culik BM, Trippel EA, Ginzkey L Behavioral reactions of free-ranging harbor porpoises Phocoena phocoena encountering standard nylon and BaSO4 mesh gillnets and warning sound......................................................................... 285-294 Zerbini AN, Andriolo A, Heide-Jørgensen MP, Pizzorno JL, Maia YG, VanBlaricom GR, DeMaster DP, Simões-Lopes PC, Moreira S, Bethlem C Satellite-monitored movements of humpback whales Megaptera novaeangliae in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean.................................................................................................................................... 295-304 NOTE Brian R. Maricle, Raymond W. Lee Effects of environmental salinity on carbon isotope discrimination and stomatal conductance in Spartina grasses................................................................................................................................ 305-310 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES: Vol. 314, May 22, 2006. Swanson RL, de Nys R, Huggett MJ, Green JK, Steinberg PD In situ quantification of a natural settlement cue and recruitment of the Australian sea urchin Holopneustes purpurascens .................................................................................................................... 1-14 RESEARCH ARTICLES Barnes DKA Temporal-spatial stability of competition in marine boulder fields......................................................... 15-23 Incera M, Lastra M, López J Effect of swash climate and food availability on sandy beach macrofauna along the NW coast of the Iberian Peninsula ................................................................................................................................... 25-33 Rutger SM, Wing SR Effects of freshwater input on shallow-water infaunal communities in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand. 35-47 Janowitz GS, Kamykowski D Modeled Karenia brevis accumulation in the vicinity of a coastal nutrient front .................................... 49-59 Eker-Develi E, Kideys AE, Tugrul S Role of Saharan dust on phytoplankton dynamics in the northeastern Mediterranean......................... 61-75

Page 62: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

62

Lassen J, Kortegård M, Riisgård HU, Friedrichs M, Graf G, Larsen PS Down-mixing of phytoplankton above filter-feeding mussels—interplay between water flow and biomixing................................................................................................................................................ 77-88 Hori M Intertidal surfgrass as an allochthonous resource trap from the subtidal habitat .................................. 89-96 Frisch Zaleski S, Murray SN Taxonomic diversity and geographic distributions of aquarium-traded species of Caulerpa (Chlorophyta: Caulerpaceae) in southern California, USA.................................................................. 97-108 Benitez Villalobos F, Tyler PA, Young CM Temperature and pressure tolerance of embryos and larvae of the Atlantic seastars Asterias rubens and Marthasterias glacialis (Echinodermata: Asteroidea): potential for deep-sea invasion.............. 109-117 Kline DI, Kuntz NM, Breitbart M, Knowlton N, Rohwer F Role of elevated organic carbon levels and microbial activity in coral mortality................................ 119-125 Rosenfeld M, Shemesh A, Yam R, Sakai K, Loya Y Impact of the 1998 bleaching event on d18O records of Okinawa corals......................................... 127-133 Ulstrup KE, Berkelmans R, Ralph PJ, van Oppen MJH Variation in bleaching sensitivity of two coral species across a latitudinal gradient on the Great Barrier Reef: the role of zooxanthellae .............................................................................................. 135-148 Phillips NE, Shima JS Differential effects of suspended sediments on larval survival and settlement of New Zealand urchins Evechinus chloroticus and abalone Haliotis iris.................................................................... 149-158 Houghton JDR, Doyle TK, Davenport J, Hays GC Developing a simple, rapid method for identifying and monitoring jellyfish aggregations from the air159-170 Finenko GA, Kideys AE, Anninsky BE, Shiganova TA, Roohi A, Tabari MR, Rostami H, Bagheri S Invasive ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi in the Caspian Sea: feeding, respiration, reproduction and predatory impact on the zooplankton community.............................................................................. 171-185 Barnes DKA, Webb K, Linse K Slow growth of Antarctic bryozoans increases over 20 years and is anomalously high in 2003 ...... 187-195 Benzie JAH, Smith-Keune C Microsatellite variation in Australian and Indonesian pearl oyster Pinctada maxima populations .... 197-211 Tönnesson K, Nielsen TG, Tiselius P Feeding and production of the carnivorous copepod Pareuchaeta norvegica in the Skagerrak....... 213-225 Carotenuto Y, Ianora A, Di Pinto M, Sarno D, Miralto A Annual cycle of early developmental stage survival and recruitment in the copepods Temora stylifera and Centropages typicus...................................................................................................... 227-238 Juul-Pedersen T, Nielsen TG, Michel C, Friis Møller E, Tiselius P, Thor P, Olesen M, Selander E, Gooding S Sedimentation following the spring bloom in Disko Bay, West Greenland, with special emphasis on the role of copepods .......................................................................................................................... 239-255 Sourisseau M, Simard Y, Saucier FJ Krill aggregation in the St. Lawrence system, and supply of krill to the whale feeding grounds in the estuary from the gulf .......................................................................................................................... 257-270 Morgan SG, Spilseth SA, Page HM, Brooks AJ, Grosholz ED Spatial and temporal movement of the lined shore crab Pachygrapsus crassipes in salt marshes and its utility as an indicator of habitat condition ............................................................................... 271-281 Teske PR, McQuaid CD, Froneman PW, Barker NP Impacts of marine biogeographic boundaries on phylogeographic patterns of three South African estuarine crustaceans........................................................................................................................ 283-293 Bourque JF, Dodson JJ, Ryan DAJ, Marcogliese DJ Cestode parasitism as a regulator of early life-history survival in an estuarine population of rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax...................................................................................................................... 295-307 AS WE SEE IT

Page 63: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

63

Dempster T, Sanchez-Jerez P, Tuya F, Fernandez-Jover D, Bayle-Sempere J, Boyra A, Haroun R Coastal aquaculture and conservation can work together ................................................................ 309-310 MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION: Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2006. Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution 3rd Young Investigators' Workshop: www.smbe.org ......... 847 Barbara R. Holland, Lars S. Jermiin, and Vincent Moulton Improved Consensus Network Techniques for Genome-Scale Phylogeny ...................................... 848-855 Christopher E. Lane, Hameed Khan, Melissa MacKinnon, Anna Fong, Stan Theophilou, and John M. Archibald Insight into the Diversity and Evolution of the Cryptomonad Nucleomorph Genome ...................... 856-865] Masato Nikaido, Healy Hamilton, Hitomi Makino, Takeshi Sasaki, Kazuhiko Takahashi, Mutsuo Goto, Naohisa Kanda, Luis A. Pastene, and Norihiro Okada Baleen Whale Phylogeny and a Past Extensive Radiation Event Revealed by SINE Insertion Analysis.............................................................................................................................................. 866-873 Mark I. Stevens, Penelope Greenslade, Ian D. Hogg, and Paul Sunnucks Southern Hemisphere Springtails: Could Any Have Survived Glaciation of Antarctica? .................. 874-882 Anthony J. Greenberg and Chung-I Wu Molecular Genetics of Natural Populations ....................................................................................... 883-886 Karen D. Crow and Günter P. Wagner What Is the Role of Genome Duplication in the Evolution of Complexity and Diversity?.................. 887-892 Andrew C. Clarke, Michael K. Burtenshaw, Patricia A. McLenachan, David L. Erickson, and David Penny Reconstructing the Origins and Dispersal of the Polynesian Bottle Gourd (Lagenaria siceraria) ..... 893-900 Lesley Collins and David Penny Investigating the Intron Recognition Mechanism in Eukaryotes........................................................ 901-910 Matthew W. Hahn Accurate Inference and Estimation in Population Genomics ............................................................ 911-918 Stéphane Guindon, Mik Black, and Allen Rodrigo Control of the False Discovery Rate Applied to the Detection of Positively Selected Amino Acid Sites ................................................................................................................................................... 919-926 Kiyoshi Ezawa, Satoshi OOta, and Naruya Saitou Genome-Wide Search of Gene Conversions in Duplicated Genes of Mouse and Rat ..................... 927-940 Junko Kusumi, Aya Sato, and Hidenori Tachida Relaxation of Functional Constraint on Light-Independent Protochlorophyllide Oxidoreductase in Thuja .................................................................................................................................................. 941-948 Hilary C. Miller, Katherine Belov, and Charles H. Daugherty MHC Class I Genes in the Tuatara (Sphenodon spp.): Evolution of the MHC in an Ancient Reptilian Order.................................................................................................................................................. 949-956 Ralph Haygood Mutation Rate and the Cost of Complexity........................................................................................ 957-963 Yasuhiro Go Lineage-Specific Expansions and Contractions of the Bitter Taste Receptor Gene Repertoire in Vertebrates ........................................................................................................................................ 964-972 Leonie C. Moyle and Elaine B. Graham Genome-Wide Associations Between Hybrid Sterility QTL and Marker Transmission Ratio Distortion973-980 Masafumi Nozawa, Masahiko Kumagai, Tadashi Aotsuka, and Koichiro Tamura Unusual Evolution of Interspersed Repeat Sequences in the Drosophila ananassae Subgroup ..... 981-987 Greg Ewing and Allen Rodrigo Coalescent-Based Estimation of Population Parameters When the Number of Demes Changes Over Time .......................................................................................................................................... 988-996 Araceli M. Huerta, Julio Collado-Vides, and M. Pilar Francino

Page 64: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

64

Positional Conservation of Clusters of Overlapping Promoter-Like Sequences in Enterobacterial Genomes ......................................................................................................................................... 997-1010 Letters: Aurora M. Nedelcu, Tudor Borza, and Robert W. Lee A Land Plant–Specific Multigene Family in the Unicellular Mesostigma Argues for Its Close Relationship to Streptophyta.......................................................................................................... 1011-1015 M. Imwong, D. Sudimack, S. Pukrittayakamee, L. Osorio, J. M. Carlton, N. P. J. Day, N. J. White, and T. J. C. Anderson Microsatellite Variation, Repeat Array Length, and Population History of Plasmodium vivax ...... 1016-1018 Research Articles: E. Susko, J. Leigh, W. F. Doolittle, and E. Bapteste Visualizing and Assessing Phylogenetic Congruence of Core Gene Sets: A Case Study of the -Proteobacteria................................................................................................................................ 1019-1030 Lisa Klasson and Siv G. E. Andersson Strong Asymmetric Mutation Bias in Endosymbiont Genomes Coincide with Loss of Genes for Replication Restart Pathways....................................................................................................... 1031-1039] Hideki Innan and Hidemi Watanabe The Effect of Gene Flow on the Coalescent Time in the Human-Chimpanzee Ancestral Population1040-1047 Deborah L. Robertson and Aurélien Tartar Evolution of Glutamine Synthetase in Heterokonts: Evidence for Endosymbiotic Gene Transfer and the Early Evolution of Photosynthesis ........................................................................................... 1048-1055 Vaishali Katju and Michael Lynch On the Formation of Novel Genes by Duplication in the Caenorhabditis elegans Genome ......... 1056-1067 Seong-Ho Kim and Soojin V. Yi Correlated Asymmetry of Sequence and Functional Divergence Between Duplicate Proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ............................................................................................................ 1068-1075 Pleuni S. Pennings and Joachim Hermisson Soft Sweeps II—Molecular Population Genetics of Adaptation from Recurrent Mutation or Migration1076-1084 Kei Iida and Mitiko Go Survey of Conserved Alternative Splicing Events of mRNAs Encoding SR Proteins in Land Plants Errata: An Analysis of Signatures of Selective Sweeps in Natural Populations of the House Mouse ............... 1095 Selectionism and Neutralism in Molecular Evolution.............................................................................. 1095 PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM: Scientific Results: Vol. 185: Izu-Mariana Margin. Sites 801 and 1149. 12 April -14 June 1999. Leg 185 Synthesis: Sampling the Oldest Crust in the Ocean Basins to Understand Earth’s Geodynamic and Geochemical Fluxes John N. Ludden, Terry Plank, Roger Larson, and Carlota Escutia .......................................................... 014 Data Report: Pliocene–Late Pleistocene Diatom Biostratigraphic Data from ODP Leg 185, Hole 1149A Karyn S. Olschesky and Richard A. Laws ................................................................................................ 007 Bacterial Populations in Deepwater Low-Sedimentation-Rate Marine Sediments and Evidence for Subsurface Bacterial Manganese Reduction (ODP Site 1149, Izu-Bonin Trench) Barry A. Cragg, Peter Wellsbury, Richard W. Murray, and R. John Parkes ............................................ 008 Silicoflagellate Biostratigraphy, Hole 1149A (ODP Leg 185, Nadezhda Basin, Northwestern Pacific) Francesca Lozar and Massimo Mussa..................................................................................................... 009 Calcareous Nannofossil Biostratigraphy of Cretaceous Sediments Recovered at ODP Site 1149 (Leg 185, Nadezhda Basin, Western Pacific) Francesca Lozar and Fabrizio Tremolada................................................................................................ 010

Page 65: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por

65

6. Cretaceous Radiolarian Biochronology and Carbon Isotope Stratigraphy of ODP Site 1149 (Northwestern Pacific, Nadezhda Basin) Annachiara Bartolini.................................................................................................................................. 011 Pleistocene Deep-Sea Sediment in ODP Hole 1149A, Nadezhda Basin: Sources, Alteration, and Age Controls ................................................................................................................................... 0–800 ka) Michael Urbat and Thomas Pletsch.......................................................................................................... 012 Correlation between Core, Logging, and Seismic Data at Site 1149 in the Nadezhda Basin Lewis J. Abrams........................................................................................................................................ 001 Progressive Microfabric Changes in Unconsolidated Pelagic and Hemipelagic Sediments Down to 180 mbsf, Northwest Pacific, ODP Leg 185, Site 1149 Kiichiro Kawamura and Yujiro Ogawa ...................................................................................................... 003 Data Report: Silica Mineral Crystallization with Textural Change of Cretaceous Siliceous/Calcareous Pelagic Sedimentary Rocks Recovered from the Northwest Pacific, ODP Leg 185 Chihiro Tanaka and Yujiro Ogawa............................................................................................................ 004 Data Report: Measurement of Mass Transfer Properties with Subducted Oceanic Plate Tetsuro Hirono .......................................................................................................................................... 002 Data Report: Electrical Resistivity and X-Ray Computed Tomography Measurements of Sedimentary and Igneous Units from Hole 801C and Site 1149 Tetsuro Hirono and Lewis J. Abrams........................................................................................................ 005 Data Report: 40Ar/39Ar Chronology of Discrete Ash Layers in the Northwestern Pacific: ODP Sites 1149 And 1179 C. Escutia, M. Canon, and J. Gutierrez-Pastor ........................................................................................ 015 SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA: Vol. 85, No. 2, December 2005. TECHNICAL REPORTS OF THE ALLAN HANCOCK FOUNDATION: No. 2, April 1980: Illustrated Key to the Planktonic Copepods of San Pedro Bay, California. By John K. Dawson and Geraldine Knatz. ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA: Vol. 35, No. 3, May 2006. Original Articles A preliminary revision of the genus Plecotus (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) based on genetic and morphological results Friederike Spitzenberger, Petr P. Strelkov, Hans Winkler, Elisabeth Haring ........................................... 187 Glands, muscles and genitalia. Morphological and phylogenetic implications of histological characters in the male genitalia of Fritillary butterflies (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Argynnini) Thomas J. Simonsen ................................................................................................................................ 231 Phylogenetic relationships of freshwater bryozoans (Ectoprocta, Phylactolaemata) inferred from mitochondrial ribosomal DNA sequences Makiko Okuyama, Hiroshi Wada, Teruhisa Ishii....................................................................................... 243 Interrelationships of the Gastrotricha and their place among the Metazoa inferred from 18S rRNA genes M. Antonio Todaro, Maximilian J. Telford, Anne E. Lockyer, D. Timothy J. Littlewood............................ 251 The philosophical basis of character coding for the inference of phylogenetic hypotheses Kirk Fitzhugh............................................................................................................................................. 261

Page 66: MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO A LA BIBLIOTECA ¨DRA. MA. …mzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/06/Jun06.pdf · 2006-08-09 · c c v universidadnaci on al ut nomamexic o por