Adaptation of intertidal sand meiofaunal oxygen uptake to temperature and population density
Boaden, P.J.S. (1989). Adaptation of intertidal sand meiofaunal oxygen uptake to temperature and population density, in: Ros, J.D. (Ed.) Topics in Marine Biology: Proceedings of the 22nd European Marine Biology Symposium, Barcelona, Spain, August 1987. Scientia Marina (Barcelona), 53(2-3): pp. 329-334
In: Ros, J.D. (Ed.) (1989). Topics in marine biology: Proceedings of the 22nd European Marine Biology Symposium, Barcelona, Spain, August 1987. European Marine Biology Symposia, 22. Scientia Marina (Barcelona), 53(2-3). 145-754 pp., more
Oxygen budget studies on meiofauna from a Northern Ireland beach indicated that respiration was lowest when the ambient temperature was 12 °C and that oxygen uptake rates were affected by the test organism batch-size. Further work has shown that the gastrotrich Turbanella varians acclimated from 8°C has lower respiration at 12°C than at 8, 10, 14 or 16°C. Respiration increases substantially after 24 h in sterile seawater at all the temperatures tested. Experiments show this is probably due to food searching activity. It is shown that oxygen uptake per individual in the gastrotrich Neodasys chaetonotoideus declines with population density in the sample test chamber . This is due to a substance produced by Neodasys itself and is a further example of chemical organization amongst meiofauna. Additional parameters such as ambient temperature and population density must be taken into account if laboratory data are to be effectively extrapolated to field situations.
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