Merged with duplicate record 10026.1/1964 on 14.03.2017 by CS (TIS)A muddy-sand site in the North Sea was studied to identify the role of the benthic macrofauna in the resuspension of sediment. The macrobenthic community contained species capable of significant bioturbation. In particular, the presence and the temporal occurrence of the brittle star Amphiura filiformis was correlated with seasonal geotechnical and geophysical properties of the seabed. In addition, the extensive burrowing habit of the mud shrimp, Callianassa subterranea (Montagu), make this species potentially the most important contributor to the degree of bioturbation experienced at the site. Mud shrimps were an abundant and stable member of the study site's macrob...
A sharp regime shift from a brittle star Amphiura filiformis dominated state to a burrowing mud shri...
Bioturbators alter the sediment surface in the following ways: by depositing sediment on the surface...
The potential environmental effect of the brown shrimp fishery in the shallow shelf of the North Sea...
The architecture and development of the burrows of the endobenthic shrimp Callianassa subterranea fr...
In temperate and tropical seas, bioturbation resulting from the burrowing and feeding activities of ...
In the early 1990¿s a conspicuous shift took place in the density of two key macrofauna species at t...
THE biogeochemical processes and associated microbial communities in the sea floor are stratified(1)...
This study assessed the influence of crab burrows (Macrophthalmus hirtipes) on localized patterns of...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:DX176626 / BLDSC - British Library D...
1. Although parasites represent a substantial part of marine communities' biomass and diversity, the...
Bioturbation is a key process in coastal sediments, influencing microbially driven cycling of nutrie...
Graduation date: 2002A year-long field study was undertaken to investigate the influence of a number...
Recordings from burrows of the filter feeding upogebiid mud-shrimps U stellata and U deltaura, const...
The location of the sample sites was determined by randomly allocated quadrats. Twenty two 1 x 1 m q...
Active organisms modify the substratum in which they dwell. This process, called “bioturbation”, aff...
A sharp regime shift from a brittle star Amphiura filiformis dominated state to a burrowing mud shri...
Bioturbators alter the sediment surface in the following ways: by depositing sediment on the surface...
The potential environmental effect of the brown shrimp fishery in the shallow shelf of the North Sea...
The architecture and development of the burrows of the endobenthic shrimp Callianassa subterranea fr...
In temperate and tropical seas, bioturbation resulting from the burrowing and feeding activities of ...
In the early 1990¿s a conspicuous shift took place in the density of two key macrofauna species at t...
THE biogeochemical processes and associated microbial communities in the sea floor are stratified(1)...
This study assessed the influence of crab burrows (Macrophthalmus hirtipes) on localized patterns of...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:DX176626 / BLDSC - British Library D...
1. Although parasites represent a substantial part of marine communities' biomass and diversity, the...
Bioturbation is a key process in coastal sediments, influencing microbially driven cycling of nutrie...
Graduation date: 2002A year-long field study was undertaken to investigate the influence of a number...
Recordings from burrows of the filter feeding upogebiid mud-shrimps U stellata and U deltaura, const...
The location of the sample sites was determined by randomly allocated quadrats. Twenty two 1 x 1 m q...
Active organisms modify the substratum in which they dwell. This process, called “bioturbation”, aff...
A sharp regime shift from a brittle star Amphiura filiformis dominated state to a burrowing mud shri...
Bioturbators alter the sediment surface in the following ways: by depositing sediment on the surface...
The potential environmental effect of the brown shrimp fishery in the shallow shelf of the North Sea...