Data on the growth (20 species) and productivity (19 species) of Antarctic and subantarctic macrobenthos were compiled from published and unpublished sources. Differences in the production/biomass (P/B) ratio between Antarctic, Arctic and non-polar populations were examined using a set of 363 data arrays (327 non-polar, 26 Antarctic, 10 Arctic). Each array contained annual P/B ratio, mean individual body mass, geographical latitude, water depth, bottom water temperature and the nominal variables TAXON (Mollusca, Crustacea, Polychaeta, Echinodermata) and REGION (Antarctic, Arctic, non-polar). The P/B ratio was found to vary with body mass, taxon, temperature and water depth. P/B ratios of Antarctic and Arctic populations were significantly l...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
For several years marine biologists of British Antarctic Survey have been studying the nearshore com...
Abstract: Data on the growth (20 species) and productivity (19 species) of Antarctic and subantarcti...
Sampling difficulties have meant that there have been more studies of population patterns than of pr...
Using data published in 15 major marine ecology journals (from 1970 to 1999), we examined global pat...
Work on the life histories of common antarctic benthic marine invertebrates over the past several de...
Much has been made of body-size variability with latitude, and extreme body sizes in polar waters, b...
The development of sessile invertebrate assemblages on hard substrata has been studied extensively i...
Antarctic terrestrial communities are characterised by their geographical isolation and the survival...
Antarctica currently undergoes strong and contrasted impacts linked with climate change. While the W...
Abstract To understand the impact of anthropogenically induced transformations of biological commun...
Growth and mortality of 3 species (Inversiula nutrix, Celleporella bougainvillei, Fenestrulina rugul...
Benthic surveys of Borge Bay, Signy Island, South Orkney Islands indicated that the biomass of macro...
In the trace of low temperature and sea-ice formation high-latitude-ecosystem components show a stro...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
For several years marine biologists of British Antarctic Survey have been studying the nearshore com...
Abstract: Data on the growth (20 species) and productivity (19 species) of Antarctic and subantarcti...
Sampling difficulties have meant that there have been more studies of population patterns than of pr...
Using data published in 15 major marine ecology journals (from 1970 to 1999), we examined global pat...
Work on the life histories of common antarctic benthic marine invertebrates over the past several de...
Much has been made of body-size variability with latitude, and extreme body sizes in polar waters, b...
The development of sessile invertebrate assemblages on hard substrata has been studied extensively i...
Antarctic terrestrial communities are characterised by their geographical isolation and the survival...
Antarctica currently undergoes strong and contrasted impacts linked with climate change. While the W...
Abstract To understand the impact of anthropogenically induced transformations of biological commun...
Growth and mortality of 3 species (Inversiula nutrix, Celleporella bougainvillei, Fenestrulina rugul...
Benthic surveys of Borge Bay, Signy Island, South Orkney Islands indicated that the biomass of macro...
In the trace of low temperature and sea-ice formation high-latitude-ecosystem components show a stro...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
Ice in its different forms affects benthic communities in polar regions directly and indirectly. In ...
For several years marine biologists of British Antarctic Survey have been studying the nearshore com...