نتایج جستجو برای: bioerosion

تعداد نتایج: 172  

2015
Claudia Färber Max Wisshak Ines Pyko Nikoleta Bellou André Freiwald

The effects of water depth, seasonal exposure, and substrate orientation on microbioerosion were studied by means of a settlement experiment deployed in 15, 50, 100, and 250 m water depth south-west of the Peloponnese Peninsula (Greece). At each depth, an experimental platform was exposed for a summer period, a winter period, and about an entire year. On the up- and down-facing side of each pla...

2007
Marina Carreiro Marina Carreiro Silva

Title of Dissertation: THE ROLES OF NUTRIENTS AND HERBIVORY IN CONTROLLING THE MICROBIOEROSION OF TROPICAL REEFS Marina Carreiro Silva, Doctor of Philosophy, 2007 Dissertation Directed By: Professor Joseph A. Mihursky (Chair) and Professor Victor S. Kennedy (co-Chair), Center for Environmental Science, Marine, Estuarine and Environmental Sciences Program, University of Maryland Coral reefs worl...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2007
A Zundelevich B Lazar M Ilan

Bioerosion by boring sponges is an important mechanism shaping the structure of coral reefs all around the world. To determine the excavation rate by boring sponges, we developed a system in which chemical and mechanical boring rates [calcium carbonate (CaCO(3)) dissolution and chip production, respectively] were measured simultaneously in experimental tanks containing reefal rock inhabited by ...

Journal: :PloS one 2016
Nyssa J Silbiger Òscar Guadayol Florence I M Thomas Megan J Donahue

Corals build reefs through accretion of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) skeletons, but net reef growth also depends on bioerosion by grazers and borers and on secondary calcification by crustose coralline algae and other calcifying invertebrates. However, traditional field methods for quantifying secondary accretion and bioerosion confound both processes, do not measure them on the same time-scale, o...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2008
Héctor Nava José Luis Carballo

Species richness (S) and frequency of invasion (IF) by boring sponges on living colonies of Pocillopora spp. from National Park Isla Isabel (México, East Pacific Ocean) are presented. Twelve species belonging to the genera Aka, Cliona, Pione, Thoosa and Spheciospongia were found, and 56% of coral colonies were invaded by boring sponges, with Cliona vermifera Hancock 1867 being the most abundant...

2012
Max Wisshak Christine H. L. Schönberg Armin Form André Freiwald

In the recent discussion how biotic systems may react to ocean acidification caused by the rapid rise in carbon dioxide partial pressure (pCO(2)) in the marine realm, substantial research is devoted to calcifiers such as stony corals. The antagonistic process - biologically induced carbonate dissolution via bioerosion - has largely been neglected. Unlike skeletal growth, we expect bioerosion by...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2014
Chris T Perry Gary N Murphy Paul S Kench Evan N Edinger Scott G Smithers Robert S Steneck Peter J Mumby

Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate production and reef growth. Using a cross-regional dataset, we show that widespread reductions in bioerosion rates-a key carbonate cycling process-have accompanied carbonate production declines. Bioerosion by parrotfish, urchins, endolithic sponges and microendoliths collectively averages 2 G (where G ...

2013
Max Wisshak Christine H. L. Schönberg Armin Form André Freiwald

Coral reefs are under threat, exerted by a number of interacting effects inherent to the present climate change, including ocean acidification and global warming. Bioerosion drives reef degradation by recycling carbonate skeletal material and is an important but understudied factor in this context. Twelve different combinations of pCO2 and temperature were applied to elucidate the consequences ...

2018
Michael P Russell Victoria K Gibbs Emily Duwan

Sea urchins are dominant members of rocky temperate reefs around the world. They often occur in cavities within the rock, and fit so tightly, it is natural to assume they sculpted these "pits." However, there are no experimental data demonstrating they bore pits. If they do, what are the rates and consequences of bioerosion to nearshore systems? We sampled purple sea urchins, Strongylocentrotus...

2015
Barbara Seuss Max Wisshak Royal H. Mapes Neil H. Landman

A variety of syn-vivo bioerosion traces produced by foraminiferans is recorded in shells of Nautilus sampled near New Caledonia and Vanuatu. These are two types of attachment scars of epilithic foraminiferans and two forms of previously undescribed microborings, a spiral-shaped and a dendritic one, both most likely being the work of endolithic 'naked' foraminiferans. Scanning electron microscop...

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