Biological studies in the vicinity of a shallow-sea tidal mixing front I. Physical and chemical background II. The distribution of bacteria III. Seasonal and spatial distribution of heterotrophic uptake of glucose IV. Seasonal and spatial distribution of - Biological studies in the vicinity of a shallow-sea tidal mixing front IV. A general statistical study
Studies of the distributional properties, the interrelationships and comparisons in time and space of 21 biological, chemical and physical variables that characterize the activities in a shallow sea tidal mixing front in the Western Irish sea are presented. They represent an attempt at describing an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 1985-10, Vol.310 (1146), p.521-554 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Studies of the distributional properties, the interrelationships and comparisons in time and space of 21 biological, chemical and physical variables that characterize the activities in a shallow sea tidal mixing front in the Western Irish sea are presented. They represent an attempt at describing and interpreting biologically this complex ecosystem as a whole and particularly to assess and compare the intensity of biological and biochemical activities and differences in distribution of organisms between the upper and lower stratified and mixed water columns on the two sides of the front at different times of the year. The analyses used were mainly parametric methods, but non-parametric analyses were found to be appropriate in a few cases. The log-normal distribution tended to fit better than the normal for most variables for each water mass within each cruise. Also different discrete distributions were fitted by the method of maximum likelihood to the bacterioplankton and zooplankton data and the best fits in both cases and for each cruise, where adequately large data was available, turned out to be the negative binomial distribution. Some of the associations between the variables for separate water masses in each cruise, described by the non-parametric Spearman rank correlations, had meaningful biological interpretations while others did not. Also structural simplification through reducing the dimensionality (15 variables) of the system produced, by using principal component analysis on logarithmically transformed data, a few components that persisted throughout the cruises in the upper stratified water and could be interpreted in ecological terms; notably components showing the effect of physical stratification on biological activity, the depletion of nitrogenous compounds by plankton and the possible effect of protozooplankton grazing. Comparisons of the levels of biological and biochemical activities determined by parametric, with data logarithmically transformed, and non-parametric one-way analyses of variance (ANOVA) showed significant differences between these levels particularly glucose and urea uptake rates, consistently in the three water masses and in all cruises. The dominant feature was that the upper stratified water was different from the other two water bodies and that the two methods of analysis produced similar results. The relative importance of the biological variables to differentiate the water masses was assessed by using stepwise dis |
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ISSN: | 0080-4622 2054-0280 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rstb.1985.0130 |