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  • Electronic Resource  (8)
  • 1995-1999  (8)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1365-2486
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geography
    Notes: Hydrologists and ecologists studying tundra ecosystems have worked largely independently, with little cross-fertilization between disciplines. Their disciplines are, however, inextricably linked by a need to understand the dynamics and significance of the common substance water, in its liquid, solid and gaseous state within tundra environments. The impacts of predicted long-term changes in climate have particularly important consequences for the functioning of tundra systems and there is a pressing need to initiate studies that integrate hydrological and ecological methodologies and concepts. Our paper attempts to summarize existing information on the role of water within tundra ecosystems, to emphasize the fundamental links between the biotic and the physico/chemical environments and to suggest how a closer integration of ideas might be achieved. Given the breadth of the subject matter the paper is intended to be illustrative rather than comprehensive. The paper examines the physical impacts of water in its various states on the tundra environment, emphasizing in particular the causes of spatial variation in water availability to living organisms. The significance of water is discussed for a range of organism groups, including plants, invertebrates and microorganisms and its pivotal role in ecosystem function and disturbance stressed. The need to develop integrated hydological/ecological models for tundra systems on different spatial scales is emphasized.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Polar biology 22 (1999), S. 1-6 
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Qualitative samples of Collembola were obtained from a range of substrates near Husvik, Stromness Bay, South Georgia, between January and March 1996. Collections made at Hope Point near Grytviken (Cumberland East Bay) in 1980/1982 and 1997 were also examined. Fifteen species of Collembola were recorded around Husvik; most were widely distributed. Two of these, Friesia sp. nov. and Cryptopygus badasa, represent additions to the previously recognised fauna of 17 species. A new record of an introduced species, Hypogastrura purpurescens, was identified in collections from Hope Point in 1980/1982, bringing the total South Georgian fauna to 20 species. A key to South Georgian Collembola is included. H. purpurescens and the congeneric Hypogastrura viatica, both cosmopolitan invasive species, have also been recognised on other sub-Antarctic islands and have displaced resident species from some habitats. Their presence on South Georgia, and the dominance of H. viatica in some habitats, highlight the importance of strict quarantine measures to avoid the introduction of further alien invertebrates.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract On the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia two species of predatory beetle, Trechisibus antarcticus and Oopterus soledadinus (Coleoptera, Carabidae), were accidentally introduced. The colonisation process offers unique opportunities for testing ecological hypotheses in the field. As a basis for such studies, the spatial dynamics of the two species in the coastal lowland around Stromness Bay and Cumberland Bay were monitored during the period 1988–1996. Data are presented on the expansion of the two species and on the thermal characteristics of the tussock-forming grass Parodiochloa flabellata, which dominates the coastal lowlands. The largest expansion was shown by T. antarcticus, occurring as two populations in the Stromness Bay area. The origin of one of the populations, discovered in 1982, is Husvik Harbour, from where the species has colonised the central part of Stromness Bay. The second population, discovered in 1988 at Harbour Point, is invading the northern part of the area around Stromness Bay. Up to the present, three populations of O. soledadinus have been discovered. One population was found in 1988 at Husvik Harbour, co-existing with T. antarcticus, from where it is slowly expanding its distribution into the coastal zone. A second, very small, population of O. soledadinus was found in 1996 at Jason Harbour (Cumberland West Bay). The largest population of O. soledadinus, first reported in 1963, inhabits the area around Grytviken and King Edward Point (Cumberland East Bay), where it is the sole carabid species. The tussock grass vegetation offers a highly stable thermal environment compared with the more variable surroundings. Together with an ample food supply in the form of small arthropods and beetle larvae, and a vacant niche for arthropod predators, the benign microclimate of the tussock vegetation may explain the success of these predator introductions. Results of field observations on population parameters of the carabids, and laboratory measurement of egg production indicate the potential for large-scale co-existence.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Grass foliage-feeding ; Perimylopidae ; Reindeer ; Body size ; Indirect effects
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract South Georgia has many introduced plant and animal species, a consequence of its long history of human habitation. Introduced reindeer have a strong effect on the vegetation of the Stromness Bay area by causing the replacement of indigenous species by grazing-tolerant grasses such as the exotic Poa annua, and in certain circumstances, the indigenous Festuca contracta. Recently it has been argued that an introduced predatory carabid has contributed to declines in the abundance and an increase in the body size of adults of the indigenous perimylopid beetle Hydromedion sparsutum. However, it also appears that body size of these beetles is smaller in areas where exotic grasses predominate compared to undisturbed areas. Here we test the hypothesis that by causing the spread of poorer quality grasses, especially the exotic Poa annua, reindeer may be having an indirect effect on H. sparsutum. To do this we examined the nutritional ecology of H. sparsutum larvae on four grass species which form a major part of its diet, viz. the indigenous Parodiochloa flabellata, Phleum alpinum and Festuca contracta, and the exotic Poa annua. Larvae showed the highest growth rate on Parodiochloa flabellata, followed by Phleum alpinum, F. contracta and Poa annua. These differences are due to poorer absorption of the exotic grass, and poorer utilization of the absorbed material in the case of F. contracta. Poor growth of larvae on F. contracta appears to be due to its low water and nitrogen contents, whereas in the case of P. annua a combination of low water content and high nitrogen content may be responsible for low growth rates. Low growth rates associated with poor-quality food may lead either to a prolongation of the life cycle or of the length of feeding bouts of an insect. Neither option appears to be feasible for H. sparsutum, and this means that the outcome of feeding on poorer-quality foods would be a reduction in final adult size. This has fitness consequences for the beetle. Hence it appears that by causing the spread of grasses that are unsuitable for growth of H. sparsutum, reindeer may be having an indirect effect on this beetle species.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Colonization ; Carabid ; Predation ; Life history ; Sub-Antarctic
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Recently two species of carabid beetle were accidentally introduced onto the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. Both species are carnivorous and flightless. One of the species, Trechisibus antarcticus, is locally very abundant and in the process of invading the coastal lowland area, where the endemic herbivorous beetle Hydromedion sparsutum (Perimylopidae) is common. Field samples showed the abundance of the endemic species to be much lower, and its adult body size to be larger, in carabid-infested locations than in carabid-free locations. The sample data allowed us to estimate the growth rate of the H. sparsutum larvae and to reconstruct the most likely life-cycle of both species. A laboratory experiment showed a high mortality for the first three (out of six) larval instars of H. sparsutum in groups which had been subjected to predation by T. antarcticus. The duration of the period during which the larvae are vulnerable to predation was shown in a growth experiment to depend on food type. Quantitative and qualitative aspects of the interaction between the introduced predator and the endemic prey, and conditions which allowed the former to invade are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  As an addendum to a recent publication on the terrestrial arthropod fauna of the Byers Peninsula Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), which included preliminary identification of four Collembola, we now present detailed information on Collembola occurring within the SSSI. Five species were recorded [Friesea grisea (Schaffer), Tullbergia mixta Wahlgren, Isotoma (Folsomotoma) octooculata (Willem), Cyptopygus antarcticus Willem, and Cryptopygus sp. nov.]. Species occurrence and abundance differed between samples collected from poorly vegetated stony ground and vegetation cores. F. grisea was both the commonest (58% of individuals) and the most widely distributed (18/19 samples) springtail in the former habitat. Cryptopygus sp. nov. was recorded only in the vegetation core samples. All five species were more evenly distributed in vegetation samples, although C. antarcticus and Cryptopygus sp. nov. were again the least abundant. A list of the terrestrial arthropods of the SSSI is presented.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  An experiment was conducted to measure the effects of summer warming on the total population densities of soil-dwelling microarthropods in the high Arctic and to compare these results with those from natural between-year and between-site variations. Small polythene tents were used to elevate summer temperatures over 3 years on polar semi-desert and tundra heath in West Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Norway. Soil cores were taken at regular intervals from tented and untented (control) plots and heat extracted for mites (Acarina: Oribatida) and springtails (Collembola). Species present were similar at both sites, but at the start of the experiment total springtail populations were greater at the polar semi-desert whilst oribatid mite densities were equal at both sites. No significant effect of temperature elevation on oribatid mite populations emerged, even after 3 years. By contrast, springtail numbers were significantly lower on tented versus control plots at the polar semi-desert at the end of year 3, but not so at the tundra heath. Collembola numbers declined at both sites during the warm dry midsummers of 1992/1993 and this was most marked at the better drained polar semi-desert site. Over the equivalent period total oribatid mite populations, while relatively more stable, increased significantly at the polar semi-desert as a result of an increase in the number of juveniles. Results are interpreted in the context of the ecophysiological adaptations of oribatid mites and springtails to soil temperature and moisture. The resulting survival characteristics are considered in relation to the temperature and moisture characteristics of the two sites. The experiment demonstrated that year to year variation in climate, interacting with physical differences between sites, produced an equal or greater effect on microarthropod numbers at any one site than the 8–10% increase in “heat availability” (day degrees above zero) resulting from the summer tent treatment. The limitations of the use of tents to elevate soil temperatures are discussed. Comparisons are made with microarthropod population data from other polar and alpine sites.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An experiment was conducted to measure the effects of summer warming on the total population densities of soil-dwelling microarthropods in the high Arctic and to compare these results with those from natural between-year and between-site variations. Small polythene tents were used to elevate summer temperatures over 3 years on polar semi-desert and tundra heath in West Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Norway. Soil cores were taken at regular intervals from tented and untented (control) plots and heat extracted for mites (Acarina: Oribatida) and springtails (Collembola). Species present were similar at both sites, but at the start of the experiment total springtail populations were greater at the polar semi-desert whilst oribatid mite densities were equal at both sites. No significant effect of temperature elevation on oribatid mite populations emerged, even after 3 years. By contrast, springtail numbers were significantly lower on tented versus control plots at the polar semi-desert at the end of year 3, but not so at the tundra heath. Collembola numbers declined at both sites during the warm dry midsummers of 1992/1993 and this was most marked at the better drained polar semi-desert site. Over the equivalent period total oribatid mite populations, while relatively more stable, increased significantly at the polar semi-desert as a result of an increase in the number of juveniles. Results are interpreted in the context of the ecophysiological adaptations of oribatid mites and springtails to soil temperature and moisture. The resulting survival characteristics are considered in relation to the temperature and moisture characteristics of the two sites. The experiment demonstrated that year to year variation in climate, interacting with physical differences between sites, produced an equal or greater effect on microarthropod numbers at any one site than the 8–10% increase in “heat availability” (day degrees above zero) resulting from the summer tent treatment. The limitations of the use of tents to elevate soil temperatures are discussed. Comparisons are made with microarthropod population data from other polar and alpine sites.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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