Sub-Lethal Effects of Elevated Concentration of CO_2 on Planktonic Copepods and Sea Urchins
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
- Oceanographic Society of Japanの論文
- 2004-08-01
著者
-
SHIMODE SHINJI
Graduate School of Environmental and Information Sciences, Yokohama National University
-
Shimode Shinji
Graduate School Of Environmental And Information Sciences Yokohama National University
-
Shirayama Yoshihisa
Seto Marine Biological Laboratory Graduate School Of Science Kyoto University
-
KURIHARA HARUKO
Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, Kyoto University
-
Kurihara Haruko
Seto Marine Biological Laboratory Graduate School Of Sciences Kyoto University
-
Kurihara Haruko
Seto Marine Biological Laboratory Kyoto University
関連論文
- Reproductive Ecology of the Dominant Dinoflagellate, Ceratium fusus, in Coastal Area of Sagami Bay, Japan
- Reproductive ecology of dominant dinoflagellate, Ceratium furca, in the coastal area of Sagami Bay
- Seasonal Patterns of Vertical Distribution between Meiofaunal Groups in Relation to Phytodetritus Deposition in the Bathyal Sagami Bay, Central Japan
- Respiration Rates of Free-Living Marine Nematodes in the Subtidal Coarse-Sand Habitat of Otsuchi Bay, Northeastern Honshu, Japan
- Diel vertical migration and life strategies of two phytal-dwelling harpacticoids, Ambunguipes rufocincta and Eudactylops spectabilis
- Taxonomic Study of the Kinorhyncha in Japan. III. Echinoderes sensibilis n. sp. (Kinorhyncha: Cyclorhagida) from Tanabe Bay
- Echinoderes aureus n. sp. (Kinorhyncha : Cyclorhagida) from Tanabe Bay (Honshu Island), Japan, with a Key to the Genus Echinoderes
- Reproductive Ecology of Three Species of Interstitial Harpacticoid Copepod in Otsuchi Bay, Northeastern Japan
- Sub-Lethal Effects of Elevated Concentration of CO_2 on Planktonic Copepods and Sea Urchins
- EFFECTS OF INCREASED CO_2 CONCENTRATION IN THE SEA WATER ON THE EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF SEA URCHIN EMBRYOS(Behavior Biology and Ecology)(Proceedings of the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)
- Use of Colloidal Iron as a Tracer to Measure the Ingestion Rates of Free-Living Marine Nematodes