Journal Title
Title of Journal: Polar Biol
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Abbravation: Polar Biology
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Publisher
Springer-Verlag
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Authors: Anna Kidawa Katarzyna Stepanowska Marta Markowska Stanisław RakusaSuszczewski
Publish Date: 2007/10/24
Volume: 31, Issue: 4, Pages: 519-525
Abstract
Chemical cues released from dead or injured organisms constitute important signals informing nearby animals about a feeding possibility The ability to detect the signal evaluate its meaning and locate its source can help organisms to exploit food resources efficiently which is especially important to animals living in environments with limited food supply Experiments were carried out to study the behavioral responses of several Antarctic benthic invertebrates to fish Notothenia corriceps blood Necrophagous species such as sea stars Odontaster validus and Lysasterias sp amphipod Waldeckia obesa and nemertean Parborlasia corrugatus responded to fish blood with changes in their behavior The behavior common to all these species was locomotion directed towards the stimulus source Behavioral components consistent with food consumption were observed in O validus and P corrugatus The reaction of herbivorous limpets Nacella concinna to fish blood depended on the animal size Large 10 mm limpets showed no behavioral response whereas small ones 10 mm reacted to the stimulus by moving a short distance away These results indicate that blood released from the tissues of injured or dead animals may be an important chemical signal for organisms belonging to different taxaData presented in this study were collected during the XXIX Polish Antarctic Expedition at H Arctowski Station King George Island South Shetlands The work was financed by the State Committee for Scientific Research grant 3 P04F 023 25 years 2003–2006 Particular thanks are addressed to three anonymous referees for their most helpful comments on the manuscript
Keywords:
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Other Papers In This Journal:
- The HSP70 heat shock response in the Antarctic fish Harpagifer antarcticus
- The diet of the Antarctic fur seal Arctocephalus gazella at Harmony Point, South Shetland Islands: evidence of opportunistic foraging on penguins?
- Water geochemistry and sedimentary pigments in northern Victoria Land lakes, Antarctica
- High Arctic vegetation after 70 years: a repeated analysis from Svalbard
- Factors affecting plasma chemistry values of the black-browed albatross Thalassarche melanophrys
- Large numbers of marine mammals winter in the North Water polynya
- First record of lithodid crabs from Antarctic waters off the Balleny Islands
- Biosurfactant production by Arctic and Antarctic bacteria growing on hydrocarbons
- Heat hardening in Antarctic notothenioid fishes
- Bacterial diversity in Greenlandic soils as affected by potato cropping and inorganic versus organic fertilization
- Relationships between Arctic and Antarctic Shewanella strains evaluated by a polyphasic taxonomic approach
- Leucistic southern elephant seal at Marion Island
- Atlantic snake pipefish ( Entelurus aequoreus ) extends its northward distribution range to Svalbard (Arctic Ocean)
- Combining limnology and paleolimnology to assess the influence of climate change on two lakes in Southern Greenland
- Extended ecophysiological analysis of Gomphiocephalus hodgsoni (Collembola): flexibility in life history strategy and population response
- Skull morphometry of Pygoscelis (Sphenisciformes): inter and intraspecific variations
- Is management limiting the recovery of the New Zealand sea lion Phocarctos hookeri ?
- Annual development of mat-forming conjugating green algae Zygnema spp. in hydro-terrestrial habitats in the Arctic
- Description of Gosztonyia antarctica , a new genus and species of Zoarcidae (Teleostei: Perciformes) from the Antarctic Ocean
- Temporal and vertical variations of lipid biomarkers during a bottom ice diatom bloom in the Canadian Beaufort Sea: further evidence for the use of the IP 25 biomarker as a proxy for spring Arctic sea ice
- Decadal change in macrobenthic soft-bottom community structure in a high Arctic fjord (Kongsfjorden, Svalbard)
- Synchronicity of movement paths of barren-ground caribou and tundra wolves
- Greater nitrogen and/or phosphorus availability increase plant species’ cover and diversity at a High Arctic polar semidesert
- Models of Arctic-alpine refugia highlight importance of climate and local topography
- Distribution of marine viruses and their potential hosts in Prydz Bay and adjacent Southern Ocean, Antarctic
- The role of arctic zooplankton in biogeochemical cycles: respiration and excretion of ammonia and phosphate during summer
- Temporal patterns of benthic community development in an Arctic fjord (Kongsfjorden, Svalbard): results of a 24-year manipulation study
- Diversity, structure and interactions of encrusting lithophyllic macrofaunal assemblages from Belgica Bank, East Greenland
- Pelagic swarms and beach strandings of the squat lobster Munida gregaria (Anomura: Munididae) in the Beagle Channel, Tierra del Fuego
- Characterization of yeast and filamentous fungi isolated from cryoconite holes of Svalbard, Arctic
- Snow-induced changes in dwarf birch chemistry increase moth larval growth rate and level of herbivory
- Distribution and population dynamics of Euphausia superba : summary of recent findings
- Invasion of terrestrial enchytraeids into two postglacial tundras: North-eastern Greenland and the Arctic Archipelago of Canada (Enchytraeidae, Oligochaeta)
- Variability in the summer diets of juvenile polar cod ( Boreogadus saida ) in the northeastern Chukchi and western Beaufort Seas
- Distribution and diet of 0-group cod ( Gadus morhua ) and haddock ( Melanogrammus aeglefinus ) in the Barents Sea in relation to food availability and temperature
- Photoadaptation of an ice algal community in thin sea ice, Saroma-Ko Lagoon, Hokkaido, Japan
- Photoadaptation of an ice algal community in thin sea ice, Saroma-Ko Lagoon, Hokkaido, Japan
- Chemical defenses of tunicates of the genus Aplidium from the Weddell Sea (Antarctica)
- Plectolyngbya hodgsonii : a novel filamentous cyanobacterium from Antarctic lakes
- Inter-breeding movements of common guillemots ( Uria aalge ) suggest the Barents Sea is an important autumn staging and wintering area
- Degradation of nonane by bacteria from Antarctic marine sediment
- Metabolic fingerprinting of arctic copepods Calanus finmarchicus , Calanus glacialis and Calanus hyperboreus
- Observations of bowhead whales ( Balaena mysticetus ) in the Svalbard area 1940–2009
- Individual variability of behavioural responses by Wandering Albatrosses ( Diomedea exulans ) to human disturbance
- Recent range expansions in non-native predatory beetles on sub-Antarctic South Georgia
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