Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos
Young, C.M.; Eckelbarger, K.J. (Ed.) (1994). Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. Columbia University Press: New York. ISBN 0-231-08004-2. XV, 336 pp. |
Available in | Authors | VLIZ: Aquatic communities PBC.9 [104586] |
Keywords | Aquatic communities > Benthos Biological development > Larval development Population functions > Recruitment Reproduction Marine/Coastal |
Authors | | Top | - Young, C.M., editor
- Eckelbarger, K.J., editor
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Content | - Young, C.M. (1994). A tale of two dogmas: the early history of deep-sea reproductive biology, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 1-25, more
- Pearse, J.S. (1994). Cold-water echinoderms break 'Thorson's Rule', in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 26-43, more
- Scheltema, R.S. (1994). Adaptations for reproduction among deep-sea benthic molluscs: an appraisal of the existing evidence, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 44-75, more
- Gustafson, R.G.; Lutz, R.A. (1994). Molluscan life history traits at deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold methane/sulfide seeps, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 76-97, more
- Bouchet, P.; Warén, A. (1994). Ontogenic migration and dispersal of deep-sea gastropod larvae, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 98-117, more
- Stuart, C.T.; Rex, M.A. (1994). The relationship between developmental pattern and species diversity in deep-sea prosobranch snails, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 118-136, more
- Eckelbarger, K.J. (1994). Ultrastructural features of gonads and gametes in deep-sea invertebrates, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 137-157, more
- Tyler, P.A.; Campos-Creasey, L.S.; Giles, L.A. (1994). Environmental control of quasi-continuous and seasonal reproduction in deep-sea benthic invertebrates, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 158-178, more
- Young, C.M. (1994). The biology of external fertilization in deep-sea echinoderms, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 179-200, more
- Mullineaux, L.S. (1994). Implications of mesoscale flows for dispersal of deep-sea larvae, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 201-222, more
- Gage, J.D. (1994). Recruitment ecology and age structure of deep-sea invertebrate populations, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 223-242, more
- Blake, J.A.; Watling, L. (1994). Life history studies of deep-sea benthic infauna: Polychaeta, Aplacophora, and Cumacea from the continental slope off Massachusetts, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 243-260, more
- Levin, L.A.; Plaia, G.R.; Huggett, C.L. (1994). The influence of natural organic enhancement on life histories and community structure of bathyal polychaetes, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 261-283, more
- Etter, R.J.; Caswell, H. (1994). The advantages of dispersal in a patchy environment: effects of disturbance in a cellular automaton model, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 284-305, more
- Grassle, J.F. (1994). Ecological patterns in the deep-sea benthos: how are they related to reproduction, larval biology, and recruitment?, in: Young, C.M. et al. (Ed.) Reproduction, larval biology and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos. pp. 306-314, more
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Abstract | This study explores the most fundamental biological processes in the largest and least understood habitat on earth- the deep sea. The fifteen chapters assemble an impressive list of contributers, including prominent reproductive biologists, oceanographers, and larval ecologists, to illuminate the many levels of biological integration from the cell to the community, and covering most major phyla of marine invertebrates. |
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