The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic

This thesis establishes baseline information on the distribution, biogeographical variability, habitat preference and trophic interactions for the most common Canadian Arctic cephalopod species: Gonatus fabricii, Rossia moelleri, R. palpebrosa, Bathypolypus species complex and Cirroteuthis muelleri....

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Main Author: Gardiner, Kathleen
Other Authors: Dick, Terry A. (Biological Sciences), Docker, Margaret (Biological Sciences) Baydack, Rick (Environment and Geography) Fisk, Aaron (University of Windsor)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Co-action Publishing 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30747
id ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/30747
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/30747 2023-06-18T03:38:22+02:00 The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic Gardiner, Kathleen Dick, Terry A. (Biological Sciences) Docker, Margaret (Biological Sciences) Baydack, Rick (Environment and Geography) Fisk, Aaron (University of Windsor) 2010 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30747 eng eng Co-action Publishing Cambridge University Press Gardiner, K. and T. A. Dick. 2010. Arctic cephalopod distributions and their associated predators. Polar Research. 29(2): 209-227. Gardiner, K. and T.A. Dick. 2010. A concentration of large forms of five common cephalopods from the Canadian Arctic. Marine Biodiversity Records. 3(e37): 1-6. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30747 open access Cephalopod Arctic Distribution Population Trophic analysis Gonatus fabricii Rossia palpebrosa Bathypolypus Cirroteuthis muelleri master thesis 2010 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:41:22Z This thesis establishes baseline information on the distribution, biogeographical variability, habitat preference and trophic interactions for the most common Canadian Arctic cephalopod species: Gonatus fabricii, Rossia moelleri, R. palpebrosa, Bathypolypus species complex and Cirroteuthis muelleri. Records of Arctic cephalopods and their predators were compiled and areas of interest within the Canadian Arctic were identified. Morphometric analyses of G. fabricii and R. palpebrosa identified potential populations and described the key morphometric characters associated with each population. G. fabricii separated into four groupings: Hudson Strait, Ungava Bay, Baffin Bay/Greenland and Disko Bay, while St. Lawrence R. palpebrosa were distinguishable from Arctic samples. Principal component analysis (PCA) was the preferable multivariate method for population analyses. Stable isotope analyses of δ13C identified cephalopod habitat preferences and potential ontogenetic habitat shifts while stomach content analyses, δ15N values and mixing models provided trophic information, including the first descriptions of R. palpebrosa and C. muelleri prey items. October 2015 Master Thesis Arctic Arctic Baffin Bay Baffin Bay Baffin Disko Bay Greenland Hudson Strait Polar Research Ungava Bay MSpace at the University of Manitoba Arctic Baffin Bay Greenland Hudson Hudson Strait ENVELOPE(-70.000,-70.000,62.000,62.000) Ungava Bay ENVELOPE(-67.489,-67.489,59.498,59.498)
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
topic Cephalopod
Arctic
Distribution
Population
Trophic analysis
Gonatus fabricii
Rossia palpebrosa
Bathypolypus
Cirroteuthis muelleri
spellingShingle Cephalopod
Arctic
Distribution
Population
Trophic analysis
Gonatus fabricii
Rossia palpebrosa
Bathypolypus
Cirroteuthis muelleri
Gardiner, Kathleen
The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
topic_facet Cephalopod
Arctic
Distribution
Population
Trophic analysis
Gonatus fabricii
Rossia palpebrosa
Bathypolypus
Cirroteuthis muelleri
description This thesis establishes baseline information on the distribution, biogeographical variability, habitat preference and trophic interactions for the most common Canadian Arctic cephalopod species: Gonatus fabricii, Rossia moelleri, R. palpebrosa, Bathypolypus species complex and Cirroteuthis muelleri. Records of Arctic cephalopods and their predators were compiled and areas of interest within the Canadian Arctic were identified. Morphometric analyses of G. fabricii and R. palpebrosa identified potential populations and described the key morphometric characters associated with each population. G. fabricii separated into four groupings: Hudson Strait, Ungava Bay, Baffin Bay/Greenland and Disko Bay, while St. Lawrence R. palpebrosa were distinguishable from Arctic samples. Principal component analysis (PCA) was the preferable multivariate method for population analyses. Stable isotope analyses of δ13C identified cephalopod habitat preferences and potential ontogenetic habitat shifts while stomach content analyses, δ15N values and mixing models provided trophic information, including the first descriptions of R. palpebrosa and C. muelleri prey items. October 2015
author2 Dick, Terry A. (Biological Sciences)
Docker, Margaret (Biological Sciences) Baydack, Rick (Environment and Geography) Fisk, Aaron (University of Windsor)
format Master Thesis
author Gardiner, Kathleen
author_facet Gardiner, Kathleen
author_sort Gardiner, Kathleen
title The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
title_short The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
title_full The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
title_fullStr The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
title_full_unstemmed The role of cephalopods in the Canadian Arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the Canadian eastern Arctic
title_sort role of cephalopods in the canadian arctic – an examination of their distribution, biogeography and trophic interactions within the canadian eastern arctic
publisher Co-action Publishing
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30747
long_lat ENVELOPE(-70.000,-70.000,62.000,62.000)
ENVELOPE(-67.489,-67.489,59.498,59.498)
geographic Arctic
Baffin Bay
Greenland
Hudson
Hudson Strait
Ungava Bay
geographic_facet Arctic
Baffin Bay
Greenland
Hudson
Hudson Strait
Ungava Bay
genre Arctic
Arctic
Baffin Bay
Baffin Bay
Baffin
Disko Bay
Greenland
Hudson Strait
Polar Research
Ungava Bay
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Baffin Bay
Baffin Bay
Baffin
Disko Bay
Greenland
Hudson Strait
Polar Research
Ungava Bay
op_relation Gardiner, K. and T. A. Dick. 2010. Arctic cephalopod distributions and their associated predators. Polar Research. 29(2): 209-227.
Gardiner, K. and T.A. Dick. 2010. A concentration of large forms of five common cephalopods from the Canadian Arctic. Marine Biodiversity Records. 3(e37): 1-6.
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30747
op_rights open access
_version_ 1769003385429688320