6 results match your criteria: "Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) Bremen Germany.[Affiliation]"

Unveiling the intricate relationships between animal movement ecology, feeding behavior, and internal energy budgeting is crucial for a comprehensive understanding of ecosystem functioning, especially on coral reefs under significant anthropogenic stress. Here, herbivorous fishes play a vital role as mediators between algae growth and coral recruitment. Our research examines the feeding preferences, bite rates, inter-bite distances, and foraging energy expenditure of the Brown surgeonfish () and the Yellowtail tang () within the fish community on a Red Sea coral reef.

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Meeting the objectives of sustainable fisheries management requires attention to the complex interactions between humans, institutions and ecosystems that give rise to fishery outcomes. Traditional approaches to studying fisheries often do not fully capture, nor focus on these complex interactions between people and ecosystems. Despite advances in the scope and scale of interactions encompassed by more holistic methods, for example ecosystem-based fisheries management approaches, no single method can adequately capture the complexity of human-nature interactions.

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Environmental gradients have emerged as important barriers to structuring populations and species distributions. We set out to test whether the strong salinity gradient from the marine North Sea to the brackish Baltic Sea in northern Europe represents an ecological and genetic break, and to identify life history traits that correlate with the strength of this break. We accumulated mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 sequence data, and data on the distribution, salinity tolerance, and life history for 28 species belonging to the Cnidaria, Crustacea, Echinodermata, Mollusca, Polychaeta, and Gastrotricha.

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Article Synopsis
  • Trait-based approaches enhance our understanding of ecosystems by analyzing species' functional traits, but often lack strong empirical backing, especially regarding digestion and nutrient assimilation in fishes.
  • In a study of 142 fish species from 31 families in French Polynesia, researchers found that evolutionary history, body shape, and diet influence intestinal morphology more than length alone.
  • The study revealed that stomachless, durophagous fish develop wider intestines to process larger food particles, suggesting that intestinal surface area is a more relevant metric for studying intestinal functions than just length.
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Concurrent anthropogenic global climate change and ocean acidification are expected to have a negative impact on calcifying marine organisms. While knowledge of biological responses of organisms to oceanic stress has emerged from single-species experiments, these do not capture ecologically relevant scenarios where the potential for multi-organism physiological interactions is assessed. Marine algae provide an interesting case study, as their photosynthetic activity elevates pH in the surrounding microenvironment, potentially buffering more acidic conditions for associated epiphytes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Shark populations are declining globally due to overfishing, habitat loss, and climate change, complicating conservation efforts due to lack of species-specific data.
  • In a survey conducted in Fiji's Ba Estuary, researchers captured and tagged 103 juvenile sharks of three species, indicating this area is crucial for their development and survival.
  • The findings reveal important environmental factors influencing shark abundance and highlight the need for targeted conservation strategies to protect these vulnerable species in the region.
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