Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns

Analysis of the 155 radiolarian taxa recorded in 48 plankton samples collected by means of 0-100 m tows between January and November 1972 in the California Current region revealed three faunal zones. The northernmost of these was dominated by Subarctic-transitional species; the central, which was co...

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Main Authors: Boltovskoy, D., Riedel, W.R.
Format: Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy
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spelling ftunibueairesbd:todo:paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy 2023-10-29T02:40:35+01:00 Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns Boltovskoy, D. Riedel, W.R. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar JOUR ftunibueairesbd https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy 2023-10-05T01:45:25Z Analysis of the 155 radiolarian taxa recorded in 48 plankton samples collected by means of 0-100 m tows between January and November 1972 in the California Current region revealed three faunal zones. The northernmost of these was dominated by Subarctic-transitional species; the central, which was comprised of three closely related subgroups, by intermediate-transitional taxa; and the southernmost by warm-transitional radiolarians. Of the taxa present in >5 samples, 47 - distributed among 12 species groups - plus 7 isolated species, showed significantly (p<0.05) higher abundances in either one of the areas defined. Four additional groups and several species were considerably more abundant and frequent in some areas than in others, but the corresponding differences were statistically non-significant. Some species (i.e., Acrosphaera murrayana, Spongocore cylindrica, Pseudocubus obeliscus, Trisulcus triacanthus, Botryostrobus auritus/australis, Spirocyrtis scalaris/cornutella, and Botryopyle dictyocephalus) were found to be associated with the coldest of the areas defined, rather than with the waters with highest tropical-equatorial influence, as would have been expected on the basis of previous studies. Comparison of our results with similar studies based on sedimentary materials showed some conspicuous differences, suggesting that sediments yield radiolarian assemblages with higher proportions of cold-water forms, presumably advected via subsurface currents. The cold-transitional assemblage had the lowest specific diversity and the highest dominance of a few abundant species over the rest; the intermediate-transitional showed highest diversities; and the warm-transitional lowest dominance. Indirect evidences suggest that the assemblages recorded are representative of normal, non-El Niño conditions. © 1987. Fil:Boltovskoy, D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Journal/Newspaper Subarctic Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
institution Open Polar
collection Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
op_collection_id ftunibueairesbd
language unknown
description Analysis of the 155 radiolarian taxa recorded in 48 plankton samples collected by means of 0-100 m tows between January and November 1972 in the California Current region revealed three faunal zones. The northernmost of these was dominated by Subarctic-transitional species; the central, which was comprised of three closely related subgroups, by intermediate-transitional taxa; and the southernmost by warm-transitional radiolarians. Of the taxa present in >5 samples, 47 - distributed among 12 species groups - plus 7 isolated species, showed significantly (p<0.05) higher abundances in either one of the areas defined. Four additional groups and several species were considerably more abundant and frequent in some areas than in others, but the corresponding differences were statistically non-significant. Some species (i.e., Acrosphaera murrayana, Spongocore cylindrica, Pseudocubus obeliscus, Trisulcus triacanthus, Botryostrobus auritus/australis, Spirocyrtis scalaris/cornutella, and Botryopyle dictyocephalus) were found to be associated with the coldest of the areas defined, rather than with the waters with highest tropical-equatorial influence, as would have been expected on the basis of previous studies. Comparison of our results with similar studies based on sedimentary materials showed some conspicuous differences, suggesting that sediments yield radiolarian assemblages with higher proportions of cold-water forms, presumably advected via subsurface currents. The cold-transitional assemblage had the lowest specific diversity and the highest dominance of a few abundant species over the rest; the intermediate-transitional showed highest diversities; and the warm-transitional lowest dominance. Indirect evidences suggest that the assemblages recorded are representative of normal, non-El Niño conditions. © 1987. Fil:Boltovskoy, D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.
format Journal/Newspaper
author Boltovskoy, D.
Riedel, W.R.
spellingShingle Boltovskoy, D.
Riedel, W.R.
Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
author_facet Boltovskoy, D.
Riedel, W.R.
author_sort Boltovskoy, D.
title Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
title_short Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
title_full Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
title_fullStr Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
title_full_unstemmed Polycystine radiolaria of the California Current region: Seasonal and geographic patterns
title_sort polycystine radiolaria of the california current region: seasonal and geographic patterns
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy
genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v12_nC_p65_Boltovskoy
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