Distribution of pelagic shrimps in the Australian Southern Ocean (abstract)
スポンサーリンク
概要
著者
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Nemoto Takahisa
Ocean Research Institute University Of Tokyo
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Iwasaki Nozomu
Ocean Research Institute University Of Tokyo
関連論文
- COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF FILTERING STRUCTURE OF FIVE SPECIES OF EUPHAUSIA (EUPHAUSIACEA, CRUSTACEA) FROM THE ANTARCTIC OCEAN (Ninth Symposium on Polar Biology)
- Feeding habits of mesopelagic shrimps collected off Oregon (The Biology of the Subarctic Pacific - Proceedings of the Japan-United States of America Seminar on the Biology of Micronekton of the Subarctic Pacific Part I)
- Foreword (The Biology of the Subarctic Pacific - Proceedings of the Japan-United States of America Seminar on the Biology of Micronekton of the Subarctic Pacific Part I)
- Aspects of the roles of squid in food chains of the Antarctic marine ecosystems (extended abstract)
- Foreword
- Characteristics of organic particles collected by sediment trap in the Antarctic Ocean(abstract)
- Midwater fishes of the Southern Ocean south of Australia (extended abstract)
- Salps of the Southern Ocean (Australian Sector) during the 1983-84 summer, with special reference to the species Salpa thompsoni, FOXTON 1961
- Phytoplankton community in the Subtropical Convergence at 150゜E during the austral summer of 1983-84 (extended abstract)
- Distribution of pelagic shrimps in the Australian Southern Ocean (abstract)
- LATITUDINAL VARIATION OF THE NUMBER OF MUSCLE FIBRES IN SALPA THOMPSONI (TUNICATA, THALIACEA) IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN : IMPLICATIONS FOR THE VALIDITY OF THE SPECIES SALPA GERLACHEI (Ninth Symposium on Polar Biology)
- Oceanographic conditions of the Australasian sector of the Southern Ocean in the summer of 1983-84
- Size structure of phytoplankton carbon and primary production in the Southern Ocean south of Australia during the summer of 1983-84
- 15N and 13C abundances in the Antarctic Ocean with emphasis on biogeochemical structure of food web (extended abstract)
- Pelagic Shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) from the Southern Ocean between 150°E and 115°E