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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0975
    Keywords: Key wordsAcropora ; Carbonate Sedimentology ; Community structure ; Coral reef ; Disease ; Succession
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  Well-preserved, Holocene coral reefs provide the opportunity to discriminate between models of intrinsically driven succession and extrinsically driven species replacement, especially when paleontological patterns can be combined with ecological observations of the underlying mechanisms. Rhomboid shoals in the central shelf lagoon of the Belizean Barrier Reef experienced a recent and dramatic change in community composition. Agaricia tenuifolia replaced Acropora cervicornis as the dominant coral species at 3–15 m depth along the flanks of the reefs. We tested the hypothesis that shallowing upward caused this shift in dominance. A core extracted from 0.5 m water depth on one of the shoals, Channel Cay, revealed a shallowing-upward shift in dominance from Acropora to Porites divaricata. This successional sequence was quite different from the Acropora-to-Agaricia transition observed in four cores from 6–11 m water depth. Ecological observations showed that Agaricia became the dominant at ≥3 m depth after Acropora populations were decimated by a regional outbreak of white-band disease. The Acropora-to-Agaricia transition was clearly a case of extrinsically driven species replacement rather than an intrinsically driven, successional, shallowing-upward sequence.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1435-1463
    Keywords: CGRP ; stomach ; duodenum ; distribution ; origin, rat ; immunocytochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We studied the three-dimensional distribution of structures with calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity (CGRPI) in the rat stomach and duodenum, including the origins of these structures, using indirect immunofluorescence in both muscle strips and frozen sections. There was a very dense meshwork of CGRPI fibers in the circular and longitudinal muscle layers, and also in the myenteric and submucous plexuses of the stomach and duodenum. No CGRPI neurons were seen in the stomach, even in rats treated with colchicine; in the duodenum, there was a group of CGRPI cells in the myenteric and submucous ganglia. No regional differences were seen in the stomach and duodenum. We found by experimental manipulations that CGRPI fibers in the stomach were exclusively extrinsic in origin; some of such fibers in the duodenum were intrinsic in origin, though most were supplied by CGRPI cells outside the duodenum.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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