141

MATERIAL DE RECIENTE INGRESO - UNAMmzt.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio/boletines/archivos/04/Ene04.pdf · 2004-06-16 · iii No.393: Fishstockassessmentmanual. No.396:Interactionsbetweenfishandaquaticmacrophytesininlandwaters.A

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • INTRODUCCIÓN

    De acuerdo a los principales objetivos de la biblioteca “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso Muñoz”, Unidad Académica Mazatlán del ICML, U.N.A.M. de apoyar la investigación y docencia a

    nivel regional y nacional en las áreas de ciencias del mar y limnología el poner a disposición de todos lo usuarios la información del acervo de la Biblioteca, se ha visto la necesidad de dar mayor difusión a nuestro acervo a través de la elaboración del Boletín

    Electrónico de Material Reciente de la Biblioteca.

    Este boletín pretende dar la información del acervo de reciente ingreso, ya sea por compra, donación y/o canje, a través de la referencia bibliográfica y tabla de contenido en forma más eficiente, ya que este formato de documento nos permite además realizar búsquedas

    dentro del mismo boletín (botón arriba, FIND). Asimismo del lado izquierdo de la referencia bibliográfica podemos dar un clic y nos lleva directamente a la tabla de

    contenido de esta.

    Estamos seguros que teniendo este boletín en forma electrónica, el cual se enviara por correo electrónico a las instituciones a nivel nacional, será colocado en nuestra pagina web

    de la biblioteca: http://ola.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio para que a través de internet, todos los usuarios puedan consultarlo y buscar en él los temas de su interés. De esta forma la difusión

    de nuestro acervo ira en constante aumento.

    Para cualquier consulta, dudas o comentarios, favor de enviarnos un correo a la cuenta de [email protected], donde con mucho gusto atenderemos su solicitud. Estamos en la mejor disposición de enviar a todo usuario que solicite esta información a las cuentas de

    correo respectivas.

    Se les recuerda que nuestra biblioteca tiene los catálogos de libros, tesis, revistas, memorias, informes y de reimpresos en nuestra página web.

    Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.

  • PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICASAVANCE Y PERSPECTIVA:

    Vol. 21, noviembre-diciembre de 2002

    BOTÁNICA MARINA:Vol. 46, Fasc. 6, November 2003.

    BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:Vol. 71, No. 6, December 2003.

    BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:Vol. 72, No. 3, May 2003.Vol. 73, No. 1, July 2003.

    CAHIERS DE BIOLOGIE MARINE:Vol. 44, No. 1, 2003.

    CALCOFI REPORTS:Vol. 44, 2003.

    CIENCIA. Revista de la Academia Mexicana de Ciencias:Vol. 51, No. 2, junio de 2000.Vol. 51, No. 3, septiembre de 2000.Vol. 53, No. 3, julio-septiembre de 2002.Vol. 53, No. 4, octubre-diciembre de 2002.Vol. 54, No. 1, enero-marzo de 2003.Vol. 54, No. 3, julio-septiembre de 2003.Vol. 54, No. 4, octubre-diciembre de 2003.

    CIENCIAS MARINAS:Vol. 28, No. 4, diciembre de 2002.Vol. 29, No. 4B, diciembre de 2003.

    CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:No. 11/03, November, 2003.No. 12/03, December, 2003.

    COAST & SEA:Vol. 11, No. 2, 2003.

    COMUNIDAD UNAM:

  • ii

    No. 19, 25 de octubre de 2003.No. 21, 25 de noviembre de 2003.

    CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE:No. 498, 2003: Geology and vertebrate paleontology of the early Pliocene site ofKanapoi, Northern Kenya.

    COPEIA:No. 4, December 4, 2003.

    CRUSTACEANA:Vol. 76, Part. 7, July 2003.Vol. 76, Part. 8, September 2003.

    ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:Vol. 44, No. 7, October 2003.Vol. 44, No. 8, November 2003.

    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:Vol. 29, No. 7, January 2004.Vol. 29, No. 8, February 2004.Vol. 30, No. 1, March 2004.

    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:Vol. 127, No. 2, 2004.Vol. 127, No. 3, 2004.

    EVOLUTION:Vol. 57, No. 11, November 2003.

    EXPLORATIONS:Vol. 10, No. 1, 2003.

    FAO CIRCULAR DE PESCA:No. 966: La seguridad en el mar como parte integrante de la ordenaciónpesquera.No. 989: Genetically modified organisms and aquaculture.

    FAO FISHERIES REPORT:No. 661: Report of the Conference on aquaculture in the third millennium.Bangkok, Thailand, 20-25 February 2000.

    FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:

  • iii

    No. 393: Fish stock assessment manual.No. 396: Interactions between fish and aquatic macrophytes in inland waters. Areview.No. 423: Fishing fleet profiling methodology.No. 435: Trends in oceanic captures and clustering of large marine ecosystems.Two studies based on the FAO capture database.No. 441: A guide to the seaweed industry.No. 443: The ecosystem approach to fisheries. Issues, terminology, principles,institutional foundations, implementation and outlook.

    FARO, EL:No. 33, diciembre 4 de 2003.No. 34, enero 8 de 2004.

    FISHERIES:Vol. 28, No. 10, December 2003.

    FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY:Vol. 12, No. 6, November 2003.

    FISHERY BULLETIN:Vol. 101, No. 4, October 2003.

    FORMACIÓN AMBIENTAL:Vol. 15, No. 33, julio-diciembre de 2003.

    GACETA UNAM:No. 3,683, 8 de diciembre de 2003.No. 3,684, 11 de diciembre de 2003.No. 3,685, 5 de enero de 2004.No. 3,686, 8 de enero de 2004.No. 3,687, 12 de enero de 2004.No. 3,688, 15 de enero de 2004.No. 3689, 19 de enero de 2004.No. 3690, 22 de enero de 2004.No. 3691, 26 de enero de 2004.No. 3692, 29 de enero de 2004.No. 3,693, 2 de febrero de 2004.

    GESTIÓN SINDICAL:No. Sup. No. 81-82, noviembre de 2003.

  • iv

    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:Vol. 12, No. 1, January 2003.Vol. 12, No. 2, March 2003.

    GULF AND CARIBBEAN RESEARCH:Vol. 14, No. 1, March 2003.Vol. 14, No. 2, March 2003.Vol. 15, July 2003.

    ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:Vol. 60, No. 4, August 2003.Vol. 60, No. 6, December 2003.

    INTERCIENCIA:Vol. 27, No. 6, junio de 2002.Vol. 27, No. 12, diciembre de 2002.Vol. 28, No. 1, enero de 2003Vol. 28, No. 2, febrero de 2003.

    ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:Vol. XV, No. 3, 2003.

    JOIDES JOURNAL:Vol. 29, No. 1, 2003.Vol. 29, No. 2, 2003.

    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:Vol. 30, No. 11, November 2003.Vol. 30, No. 12, December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE:Vol. 15, No. 1, January 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 2, January 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 3, February 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 4, February 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 5, March 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 6, March 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 7, April 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 8, April 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 9, May 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 10, May 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 11, June 1, 2002.

  • v

    Vol. 15, No. 12, June 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 13, July 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 14, July 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 15, August 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 16, August 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 17, September 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 18, September 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 19, October 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 20, October 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 21, November 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 22, November 15, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 23, December 1, 2002.Vol. 15, No. 24, December 15, 2002.

    JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:Vol. 233, No. 4, December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:Vol. 91, No. 6, December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:Vol. 32, No. 6, November-December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH:Vol. 108, No. C10, October 15, 2003.

    JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH:Vol. 61, No. 5, September 2003.

    JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY:Vol. 39, No. 6, December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY:Vol. 33, No.12, December 2003.

    JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:Vol. 25, No. 12, December, 2003.Vol. 26, No. 1, January, 2004.

    JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:Vol. 50, Nos. 2-3, November 2003.Vol. 50, No. 4, December 2003.

  • vi

    JOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY:Vol. 34, No. 4, December 2003.

    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY:Vol. 15, No. 2, March 1970.Vol. 18, No. 6, November 1973.Vol. 19, No. 5, September 1974.Vol. 32, No. 2, March 1987.Vol. 35, No. 8, December 1990.Vol. 36, No. 8, December 1991.Vol. 48, No. 6, November 2003.Vol. 49, No. 1, January 2004.

    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:Vol. 262, November, 2003.Vol. 263, November 2003.

    METEORITO:No. 42, enero-marzo de 2004.

    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION.Vol. 20, No. 11, November 2003.

    MONTLY WEATHER REVIEW:Vol. 130, No. 1, January 2002.Vol. 130, No. 2, February 2002.Vol. 130, No. 4, April 2002.Vol. 130, No. 5, May 2002.Vol. 130, No. 6, June 2002.Vol. 130, No. 7, July 2002.Vol. 130, No. 8, August 2002.Vol. 130, No. 9, September 2002.Vol. 130, No. 10, October 2002.Vol. 130, No. 11, November 2002.Vol. 130, No. 12, December 2002.

    NEW SCIENTIST:Vol. 180, No. 2422, November 22, 2003.Vol. 180, No. 2423, November 20, 2003.Vol. 180, No. 2424, December 6, 2003.Vol. 180, No. 2425, December 13, 2003.

    NOVEDADES MARINAS:No. 78, noviembre de 2003.

  • vii

    NORTH AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES MANAGEMENT:Vol. 23, No. 4, November 2003.

    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:Vol. 46, No. 8, 2003.Vol. 46, No. 9, 2003.

    OCLC NEWSLETTER:No. 262, October-December 2003.

    PACIFIC SCIENCE:Vol. 57, No. 4, October 2003.

    PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON:Vol. 116, No. 3, December 2, 2003.Vol. 116, No. 4, December 31, 2003.

    PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM. INITIAL REPORTS:Vol. 204: Drilling as hydrates on hydrate ridge, Cascadia Continental Margin. Sites1244-1252, 7 July-2 September 2002.Vol. 205, Fluid flow and subduction fluxes across the Costa Rica convergentmargin: Implications for the seismogenic zone and subduction factory. Sites 1253-1255, 2 September-6 November 2002.

    REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE CONTAMINACION AMBIENTAL:No. 3, julio-septiembre de 2002.

    SCIENTIA MARINA:Vol. 67, No. 4, 2003.

    SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO ZOOLOGY:No. 621, 2003.

    SOI.L SCIENCE:Vol. 166, No. 9, September 2001.Vol. 166, No. 10, October 2001.Vol. 166, No. 11, November 2001.Vol. 167, No. 1, January 2002.Vol. 167, No. 3, March 2002.Vol. 167, No. 4, April 2002.Vol. 167, No. 5, May 2002.Vol. 167, No. 6, June 2002.Vol. 167, No. 7, July 2002.Vol. 167, No. 8, August 2002.

  • viii

    Vol. 167, No. 9, September 2002.Vol. 167, No. 10, October 2002.Vol. 167, No. 12, December 2002.

    THALASSSAS:Vol. 19, No. 1, 2003.

    WATER INTERNATIONAL:Vol. 26, No. 4, December 2001.Vol. 27, No. 1, March 2002.Vol. 28, No. 3, September 2003.

    WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANEGEMENT:Vol. 11, No. 5, October 2003.

  • PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS

    AVANCE Y PERSPECTIVA:Vol. 21, noviembre-diciembre de 2002Nuevos materiales superduros

    Francisco Javier Espinoza Beltrán y Jesús Gonzáles Hernández ..............................................................347

    El pensamiento natural y las limitantes formales

    Guillermo Morales Luna..................................................................................................................................355

    Participación del Cinvestav en disciplinas de gran ciencia: física de partículas elementales

    Francisco Collazo Reyes................................................................................................................................361

    Educación para México en el siglo XXI

    Jorge Suárez Díaz ..........................................................................................................................................375

    La fisiología y la evolución según Cereijido

    Julio Muños......................................................................................................................................................379

    El dilema de los organismos transgénicos

    Carlos Chimal ..................................................................................................................................................389

    Indice de materias...........................................................................................................................................402

    Indice de autores.............................................................................................................................................405

    Indice onomástico ...........................................................................................................................................407

    BOTÁNICA MARINA:Vol. 46, Fasc. 6, November 2003Research Articles

    R. N. ROLLON, M. S. SAMSON, M. Y. ROLEDA, K. G. ARAÑO, M. W. B. VERGARA and W. Y.LICUANAN

    Estimating Biomass from the Cover of Gelidiella acerosa along the Coasts of Eastern Philippines 497-502

    A. CABELLO-PASINI, J. A. ZERTUCHE-GONZÁLEZ and I. PACHECO-RUÍZ

    Photosynthesis, Growth and Nitrogen Uptake of Competing Marine Macrophytes in the Gulf of California.................................................................................................................................................................. 503-512

    F. G. BRUN, J. L. PÉREZ-LLORÉNS, I. HERNÁNDEZ and J. J. VERGARA

    Patch Distribution and Within-Patch Dynamics of the Seagrass Zostera noltii Hornem. in Los ToruñosSalt-Marsh, Cádiz Bay, Natural Park, Spain ......................................................................................... 513-524

    E. BALESTRI and F. VALLERINI

    Interannual Variability in Flowering of Posidonia oceanica in the North-Western Mediterranean Sea, andRelationships among Shoot Age and Flowering................................................................................... 525-530

    S. M. SAIFULLAH, M. NIZAMUDDIN and S. GUL

    A New Species of Vaucheria Epiphytic on Mangroves ........................................................................ 531-533

    Y. YAMAGISHI, M. MASUDA, T. ABE, S. UWAI, K. KOGAME, S. KAWAGUCHI and S. M. PHANG

  • 2

    Taxonomic Notes on Marine Algae from Malaysia. XI. Four Species of Rhodophyceae .................. 534-547

    T. O. CHO, R. RIOSMENA-RODRIGUEZ and S. M. BOO

    First Record of Ceramium giacconei (Ceramiaceae, Rhodophyta) in the North Pacific: DevelopmentalMorphology of Vegetative and Reproductive Structures...................................................................... 548-554

    G. LEPOINT, P. DAUBY, M. FONTAINE, J.-M. BOUQUEGNEAU and S. GOBERT

    Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopic Ratios of the Seagrass Posidonia oceanica: Depth-related Variations ...555-561

    M. ZUBIA, C. E. PAYRI, E. DESLANDES and J. GUEZENNEC

    Chemical Composition of Attached and Drift Specimens of Sargassum mangarevense and Turbinariaornata (Phaeophyta: Fucales) from Tahiti, French Polynesia ............................................................. 562-571

    I. J. MILLER

    The Chemical Structure of Galactans from Some New Zealand Red Algae ..................................... 572-577

    Book Review

    Proceedings of the XVIIth International Seaweed Symposium, Cape Town, South Africa, 28 January -2February 2001 ........................................................................................................................................ 578-579

    Acknowledgement .................................................................................................................................. 580-581

    Meetings .........................................................................................................................................................582

    BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:Vol. 71, No. 6, December 2003Percutaneous Penetration of Inorganic Mercury from Soil: An In Vitro Study by P. Sartorelli, L. Montomoli,A. G. Sisinni, L. Barabesi, R. Bussani, F. Cherubini Di Simplicio .............................................................1091

    Toxicity Issues Associated with Geogenic Arsenic in the Groundwater-Soil-Plant-Human Continuum by A. L. Juhasz, R. Naidu, Y. G. Zhu, L. S. Wang, J. y. Jiang, Z. H. Cao .........................................................1100

    Cadmium Exposure of the Greek Population by S. Karavoltsos, A. Sakellari, M. Scoullos ...................1108

    QSARs for Predicting the Toxicity of Mixtures Containing Polar Narcotic Chemicals

    by Z. Lin, K. Yin, C. Wu, L. Wang, H. Yu ....................................................................................................1116

    QSAR for Prediction of Joint Toxicity of Substituted Phenols to Tadpoles (Rana japonica) by H. Huang, X. Wang, Y. Shao, D. Chen, X. Dai, L. Wang .................................................................................................1124

    Vineyard Pesticides and Their Effects on Invertebrate Biomarkers and Bioindicator Species in NewZealand by L. H. Booth, S. L. Bithell, S. D. Wratten, V. J. Heppelthwaite ...............................................1131

    Tolerance: A Useful Biological Parameter for Identifying Contaminated Sites

    by A. A. Otitoloju, T. A. Are ..........................................................................................................................1139

    Plasmid-Encoded Heavy Metal Resistance in Pseudomonas 'sp. by M. N. Ünaldi, H. Korkmaz

    B. Arlkan, G. Coral ........................................................................................................................................1145

    Histopathological Changes in the Testis of the Sprague Dawley Rat Following Orally AdministeredManganese by T. P. Ponnapakkam, G. H. Sam, M. B. Iszard ..................................................................1151

    Single and Binary-Combined Toxicity of Methamidophos, Acetochlor and Copper Acting on EarthwormsEsisenia Foelide by J. Liang, Q. Zhou . ......................................................................................................1158

    Toxicity of Copper on Four Chilean Marine Mussels by M. Zuñiga, P. Vallejos, A. Larraín, E. Bay-Schmith........................................................................................................................................................................1167

  • 3

    Nickel Induced Toxic Effects and Bioaccumulation in the Submerged Plant, Hydrilla verticillata (L.F.)Royle Under Repeated Metal Exposure by S. Sinha, K. Pandey .............................................................1175

    Removal of Copper Toxicity byZeolite in Java Tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus (Peters) by R. James,K. Sampath ...................................................................................................................................................1184

    Hematological Responses in a Freshwater Fish Channa punctatus Due to Fenvalerate by N. Seth, K. K.Saxena ..........................................................................................................................................................1192

    Sublethal Effects of Tannery Effluent on Some Hematological Indices and Growth of Clarias gariepinus(Teugels) by T. T. Gbem, J. K. Balogun, F. A. Lawal, P. A. Annune, I. Auta ..........................................1200

    Toxicity and Residue Studies of Fenvalerate to the Freshwater Fish Channa punctatus (Bloch) by K. S. Tilak, K. Veeraiah, K. S. Vardhan ...............................................................................................................1207

    Comparison of Matrix Modifiers in the Determination of Cadmium and Lead in Industrial Waste WaterPlants Around Cairo by Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometry by S. H. Abdel-Halim........................................................................................................................................................................1213

    Hydro-Geochemical Behavior of Bicarbonate and Sulfate lons Leaching from a Sulfide-Poor Silver Mine inCentral Mexico:Potential Indicator of Acid Mine Drainage

    by G. Bocanegra-García, A. Carrillo-Chávez .............................................................................................1222

    Pesticides and Heavy Metal Distribution in Southern Dead Sea Basin by M. F. El-Shahat, K. M. AI-Nawayseh, A. G. Jiries, F. M. Alnasir .........................................................................................................1230

    Lead Levels in Ambient Air and Blood of Pregnant Mothers from the General Population of Lucknow(U.P.), India by P. P. Kaul, S. Shyam, R. Srivastava, D. Misra, P. R. Salve

    S. P. Srivastava.............................................................................................................................................1239

    Persistent Organochlorine Pesticides in Coastal Sediments from Petacalco Bay, Guerrero

    Mexi'jo by D. O. Leyva-Cardoso, G. Ponce-Vélez, A. V. Botello, G. Díaz-González ..............................1244

    Polycyc1ic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Aliphatics in the Coral Reef Skeleton of the Egyptian Red SeaCoast by A. El-Sikaily, A. Khaled, A. El Nemr, T. O. Said, A. M. A. Abd-Alla ..........................................1252

    Market Basket Survey for Lead, Cadmium, Copper, Chromium, Nickel, and Zinc in Fruits and Vegetablesby Z. Parveen, M. 1. Khuhro, N. Rafiq ........................................................................................................1260

    Accumulation of Copper and Cadmium in Small and Large Nile Tilapia Oreochromis niloticus by H. Y.

  • 4

    FIELD EVIDENCE OF KRILL GRAZING ON THE TOXIC DIATOM GENUS PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA INMONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA

    Sibel Bargu and Mary W. Silver ............................................................................................................. 629-638

    LARVAL GOBIIDAE (TELEOSTEI: PERCIFORMES) OF CARRIE BOW CAY, BELIZE, CENTRALAMERICA

    Carole C. Baldwin and David G. Smith ................................................................................................. 639-674

    DIET COMPOSITION AND FEEDING HABITS OF ATLANTIC BUMPER, CHLOROSCOMBRUSCHRYSURUS (PISCES: CARANGIDAE), LARVAE IN THE SOUTHERN GULF OF MEXICO

    Marina Sánchez-Ramírez ...................................................................................................................... 675-683

    LONG-TERM TRENDS IN IMPOSEX IN SIX POPULATIONS OF STRAMONITAHAEMASTOMA

    William B. Stickle and Zhengyu Zhang ................................................................................................. 685-694

    FLOWS, SALINITY, AND SOME IMPLICATIONS FOR LARVAL TRANSPORT IN SOUTH BISCAYNEBAY, FLORIDA

    John D. Wang, Jiangang Luo, and Jerald S. Ault................................................................................. 695-723

    DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF MACROALGAE ASSOCIATED WITH ABALONE (HALIOTIS SPP.)HABITATS IN BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, MEXICO

    E. Serviere-Zaragoza, V. C. García-Hernández, and D. A. Siqueiros-Beltrones ............................... 725-739

    AUTOLYTINAE AND EXOGONINAE (POLYCHAETA: SYLLIDAE) FROM NORTHERN CYPRUS(EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA) WITH A CHECKLIST OF SPECIES REPORTED FROM THELEVANT SEA

    Melih Ertan Çinar, Zeki Ergen, and Huseyin Avni Benli ...................................................................... 741-767

    EUSYLLINAE AND SYLLINAE (ANNELIDA: POLYCHAETA) FROM NORTHERN CYPRUS (EASTERNMEDITERRANEAN SEA) WITH A CHECKLIST OF SPECIES REPORTED FROM THE LEVANT SEA

    Melih Ertan Çinar and Zeki Ergen ......................................................................................................... 769-793

    ECOLOGY OF SYLLIDAE (ANNELIDA: POLYCHAETA) FROM NORTHERN CYPRUS (EASTERNMEDITERRANEAN SEA)

    Melih Ertan Çinar, .................................................................................................................................. 795-811

    RECRUITMENT OF SESSILE MARINE INVERTEBRATES ON HAWAIIAN MACROPHYTES: DO PRE-SETTLEMENT OR POST-SETTLEMENT PROCESSES KEEP PLANTS FREE FROM FOULING?

    Linda J. Walters, Celia M. Smith, and Michael G. Hadfield, ............................................................... 813-839

    INFLUENCE OF HABITAT ON DIET AND DISTRIBUTION OF STRIPED BASS (MORONE SAXATILIS)IN A TEMPERATE ESTUARY

    Juliana M. Harding and Roger Mann, ................................................................................................... 841-851

    FURTHER NOTE ON PROPAGURUS MIYAKEI (BABA, 1986) (DECAPODA: ANOMURA: PAGURIDAE),WITH DESCRIPTION OF ITS FIRST ZOEA

    Tomoyuki Komai and Kooichi Konishi, ................................................................................................. 853-869

    MASS SPAWNING BY TWO BRITTLE STAR SPECIES, OPHIODERMA RUBICUNDUM AND O.SQUAMOSISSIMUM (ECHINODERMATA: OPHIUROIDEA), AT THE FLOWER GARDEN BANKS, GULFOF MEXICO

    Derek K. Hagman and Peter D. Vize, ................................................................................................... 871-876

    A CHARACTERIZATION OF JUVENILE FISH ASSEMBLAGES AROUND MAN-MADE STRUCTURESIN THE NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY HARBOR ESTUARY, U.S.A.

  • 5

    J. T. Duffy-Anderson, J. P. Manderson, and K. W. Able...................................................................... 877-889

    INGRESS OF TRANSFORMATION STAGE GRAY SNAPPER, LUTJANUS GRISEUS (PISCES:LUTJANIDAE) THROUGH BEAUFORT INLET, NORTH CAROLINA. Mimi W. Tzeng, Jonathan A. Hare,and David G. Lindquist, ......................................................................................................................... 891-908

    AGE AND GROWTH OF YELLOWTAIL SNAPPER, OCYURUS CHRYSURUS, FROM THESOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES

    Eden R. Garcia, Jennifer C. Potts, Roger A. Rulifson, and Charles S. Manooch III, ........................ 909-921

    BENTHOBATIS YANGI, A NEW SPECIES OF BLIND ELECTRIC RAY FROM TAIWAN(CHONDRICHTHYES: TORPEDINIFORMES: NARCINIDAE)

    Marcelo R. de Carvalho, L. J. V. Compagno, and D. A. Ebert, .......................................................... 923-939

    A NEW SPECIES OF NEMATOLAMPAS (CEPHALOPODA: OEGOPSIDA) FROM THE WESTERNCENTRAL ATLANTIC WITH AN OVERVIEW OF THE FAMILY LYCOTEUTHIDAE

    Freddy Arocha, ....................................................................................................................................... 941-953

    SYMPHURUS HERNANDEZI (PLEURONECTIFORMES: CYNOGLOSSIDAE), A NEW DEEP-WATERTONGUEFISH FROM THE SOUTHERN CARIBBEAN SEA OFF COLOMBIA

    Lina M. Saavedra-Díaz, Thomas A. Munroe, and Acero P. Arturo, ................................................... 955-970

    XYRICHTYS HALSTEADI, A NEW LABRID FISH FROM THE CENTRAL AND WESTERN PACIFIC

    John E. Randall and Phillip S. Lobel, ................................................................................................... 971-977

    THE DYNAMICS OF CORAL REEF COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND RECRUITMENT PATTERNSAROUND ROTA, SAIPAN, AND TINIAN, WESTERN PACIFIC

    N. J. Quinn and B. L. Kojis, ................................................................................................................... 979-996

    OFFSHORE DISPERSAL OF CARIBBEAN REEF FISH LARVAE: HOW FAR IS IT?

    Jennie T. Ramírez-Mella and Jorge R. García-Sais,......................................................................... 997-1017

    CHANGES IN GORGONIAN MORPHOLOGY ALONG A DEPTH GRADIENT AT ISLA ALCATRAZ, SANESTEBAN NATIONAL PARK, VENEZUELA

    Mauricio Rodríguez-Lanetty, Luis Miguel Marquez, and Freddy Losada, ..................................... 1019-1023

    FREE-LIVING COLONIES OF PORITES IN MOOREA, FRENCH POLYNESIA

    Joshua A. Idjadi and Peter J. Edmunds, ............................................................................................ 025-1031

    CHANKANAAB LAGOON (COZUMEL ISLAND, MEXICO): A PRIME REFUGE FOR SPINY LOBSTERS(PANULIRUS ARGUS)?

    Enrique Lozano-Álvarez, Patricia Briones-Fourzán, and Fernando Negrete-Soto, ...................... 1033-1042

    BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:Vol. 73, No. 1, July 2003INTRODUCTION. E. Suárez-Morales and T. Camarena-Luhrs, ................................................................ 1-3

    PHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE REEF LAGOON AT BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICO: ANOVERVIEW

    Alberto de Jesús-Navarrete, ........................................................................................................................ 5-14

    THE SHALLOW AND DEEP BATHYMETRY OF THE BANCO CHINCHORRO REEF IN THE MEXICANCARIBBEAN

    Alicia González, Daniel Torruco, Angeles Liceaga, and José Ordaz, .................................................... 15-22

  • 6

    THE ROLE OF ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS IN THE LAGOON CORAL COMMUNITY STRUCTUREOF BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICO

    Daniel Torruco, Alicia González, and José Ordaz, .................................................................................. 23-36

    A SURVEY OF THE MEDUSAN (CNIDARIA) COMMUNITY OF BANCO CHINCHORRO, WESTERNCARIBBEAN SEA

    Rebeca Gasca, Lourdes Segura-Puertas, and Eduardo Suárez-Morales, ............................................37-46

    DIVERSITY OF NEMATODA IN A CARIBBEAN ATOLL: BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICO

    Alberto de Jesús-Navarrete, ......................................................................................................................47-56

    A NOTE ON PSEUDEVADNE TERGESTINA CLAUS, 1877 (BRANCHIOPODA: CLADOCERA:ONYCHOPODA) OF BANCOCHINCHORRO, WITH OBSERVATIONS ON ITS BIOLOGY

    Iván Castellanos-Osorio and Manuel Elías-Gutiérrez, ............................................................................57-61

    THREE SPECIES OF MONSTRILLOIDS (COPEPODA: MONSTRILLOIDA) FROM BANCOCHINCHORRO, MEXICAN CARIBBEAN SEA

    Eduardo Suárez-Morales, ..........................................................................................................................63-75

    THE AMPHIPOD FAUNA OF BANCO CHINCHORRO, QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO WITH ECOLOGICALNOTES

    José Juan Oliva-Rivera, .............................................................................................................................77-89

    HYPERIID AMPHIPODS OF BANCO CHINCHORRO

    Rebeca Gasca and Chang-tai Shih, ..........................................................................................................91-98

    DEEP-WATER CARIDEAN SHRIMPS (CRUSTACEA: DECAPODA) FROM BANCO CHINCHORROAND ADJACENT AREAS IN THE NORTHERN CARIBBEAN

    Elva Escobar-Briones and JoséLuis Villalobos-Hiriart, .........................................................................99-122

    REPORT ON A COLLECTION OF CHAETOGNATHS FROM BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICANCARIBBEAN SEA

    Rosa Ma. Hernández-Flores, ............................................................................................................... 123-131

    APPENDICULARIANS (TUNICATA) OF BANCO CHINCHORRO, CARIBBEAN SEA

    Iván A. Castellanos Osorio, .................................................................................................................. 133-140

    A PRELIMINARY FISH LARVAE SURVEY IN BANCO CHINCHORRO

    Lourdes Vásquez-Yeomans, Uriel Ordóñez-López, César Quintal-Lizama, and Margarita Ornelas-Roa,.................................................................................................................................................................. 141-152

    CORAL REEF FISH ASSEMBLAGES AT BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICAN CARIBBEAN. Rosa MaríaLoreto, Mario Lara, and Juan J. Schmitter-Soto, ................................................................................ 153-170

    CRITICAL HABITAT FOR MIGRATORY LAND BIRDS, BANCO CHINCHORRO, QUINTANA ROO,MEXICO

    MacKinnon H. Barbara and Acosta Aburto Jeanett, ........................................................................... 171-186

    EFFECTS OF HURRICANE KEITH AT A PATCH REEF ON BANCO CHINCHORRO, MEXICANCARIBBEAN

    Aurora U. Beltrán-Torres, Leydi Muñoz-Sánchez, and Juan P. Carricart-Ganivet, ......................... 187-196

    BANCO CHINCHORRO: THE LAST SHELTER FOR BLACK CORAL IN THE MEXICAN CARIBBEAN

    Claudia Padilla and Mario Lara, 197-202

  • 7

    TRENDS AND DYNAMICS OF THE SPINY LOBSTER, PANULIRUS ARGUS, RESOURCE IN BANCOCHINCHORRO, MEXICO

    Eloy Sosa-Cordero, ............................................................................................................................... 203-217

    CHANGES IN THE QUEEN CONCH (STROMBUS GIGAS L.) POPULATION STRUCTURE AT BANCOCHINCHORRO, QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO, 1990-1997

    Alberto de Jesús-Navarrete, Alejandro Medina-Quej, and José Juan Oliva-Rivera, ....................... 219-229

    ABUNDANCE OF STROMBUS GIGAS ZERO-YEAR CLASS JUVENILES AT BANCO CHINCHORROBIOSPHERE RESERVE, QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO

    Alberto de Jesús-Navarrete and Víctor Valencia-Beltrán, ................................................................. 231-240

    GONAD BEHAVIOR DURING PEAK REPRODUCTION PERIOD OF STROMBUS GIGAS FROMBANCO CHINCHORRO

    Dalila Aldana Aranda, Erick Baqueiro Cárdenas, Imelda Martínez Morales, Rosa Isabel Ochoa Báez, andThierry Brulé, ........................................................................................................................................... 241-248

    CAHIERS DE BIOLOGIE MARINE:Vol. 44, No. 1, 2003BRUCE Niel L. & Jörundur SVAVARSSON. A new genus and species of Cirolanid isopod (Crustacea)from Zanzibar, Tanzania, western Indian Ocean ............................................................................................. 1

    HOURDEZ Stéphane & Daniel DESBRUYÈRES. A new species of scale worm (Polychaeta : Polynoidae),Levensteiniella iris sp. nov., from the Rainbow and Lucky Strike vent fileds (Mid-Atlantic Ridge) ............. 13

    WORSAAE Katrine & Reinhardt Möbjerg KRISTENSEN. A new species of Paranerilla (Polychaeta :Nerillidae) from northeast Greenland waters, Arctic Ocean........................................................................... 23

    AGUIRREZABALAGA Florencio & Argiloa CEBERIO. Dorvilleidae (Polychaeta) from the CapbretonCanyon (Bay of Biscay, NE Atlantic) with the description of Pettiboneia sanmartini ................................... 41

    MAKROUM Kacem & Mohammed MONCEF. Etude de la bioaccumulation du cadmium par certainsmacrophytes du littoral de la région d’El Jadida (Maroc Atlantique) ............................................................. 49

    BROCHARD Christophe J.E. & Gerhard C. CADÉE.Tropical drift-seeds from the French coast : anoverview............................................................................................................................................................. 61

    DAUVIN Jean-Claude, Jean-Marie DEWARUMEZ & Franck GENTIL. Liste actualisée des espècesd’Annélides Polychètes présentes en Manche ............................................................................................... 67

    Analyse d’ouvrage............................................................................................................................................. 97

    CALCOFI REPORTS:Vol. 44, 2003Report of the CalCOFI Committee..................................................................................................................... 5

    Review of Some California Fisheries for 2002: Market Squid, Sea Urchin, Dungeness Crab, Prawn,Coastal Pelagic Finfish, Albacore, Ocean Salmon, Nearshore Live-Fish, Pacific Herring, and Recreational............................................................................................................................................................................ 10

    The State of the California Current, 2002-2003: Tropical and Subarctic Influences Vie for Dominance

    Elizabeth Venrick, Steven J Bograd, David Checkley, Reginaldo Durazo, Gilberto Gaxiola-Castro, JohnHunter, Adriana Huyer, K. David Hyrenbach, Bertha E. Laveniegos, Arnold Mantyla, Franklin B. Schwing,Robert L. Smith, William J Sydeman, Patricia A. Wheeler............................................................................. 28

    Publications ....................................................................................................................................................... 61

    Scientific Contributions

  • 8

    Influence ofWater Column Stratification on the Depth Distributions of Pelagic Juvenile Rockfishes offCentral California

    John R. M. Ross and Ralph J Larson............................................................................................................. .65

    Scales of Interannual Variability in the California Current System: Associated Physical Mechanisms andLikely Ecological Impacts

    Daniel Lluch-Belda, Daniel B. Lluch-Cota, and Salvador E. Lluch-Cota...................................................... .76

    An Economic Overview of Dungeness Crab (Cancer magister) Processing in California

    Steven C. Hackett, Matthew J Krachey, Christopher M. Dewees, David G. Hankin, and Kristen Sortais.. 86

    Trends in the Southern California Sport Fishery

    Ronald Dotson and Richard Charter ............................................................................................................... 94

    Siliceous Phytoplankton in the Santa Barbara Channel: A Seven-Year Comparison ofSpecies in a Near-Bottom Sediment Trap and in Water Samples from the Euphotic Layer

    Elizabeth L. Venrick, Freda M. H. Reid, and Carina B. Lange.....................................................................107

    Environmental Influences on Species Composition of the Comercial Harvest of Finfish and Invertebratesof California

    Jerrold G. Norton and Janet E. Mason......................................................................................................... .123

    CIENCIAS MARINAS:Vol. 28, No. 4, diciembre de 2002Rol de los arrecifes del poliqueto invasor Ficopomatus enigmaticus Fauvel 1923 (Polychaeta: Serpulidae)en el reclutamiento de Cyrtograpsus angulatus Dana 1851 (Brachyura: Grapsidae), en la laguna costeraMar Chiquita, Argentina. The role of the invasive polychaete Ficopomatus enigmaticus Fauvel 1923(Polychaeta: Serpulidae) reefs in the recruitment of Cyrtograpsus angulatus Dana 1851 (Brachyura:Grapsidae), in the Mar Chiquita coastal lagoon, Argentin. Tomás A. Luppi y Claudia C. Bas ......... 319-330

    Patrones espaciales del atún aleta amarilla(Tunus albacares) en el Océano Pacífico Oriental:Unaexploración de Perfiles de Concentración. Spatial patterns of the yellowfin tuna(Tunus albacares)in theEastern Pacific Ocean:An exploration of Concentration profiles. A. Sosa-López y H.G. Manzo-Monroy.................................................................................................................................................................. 331-346

    Incidence of Vibrio during dermal and systemic infections of the spotted sand bass (Paralabraxmaculatofasciatus Steindachner: 1868) in captivity. Incidencia de Vibrio durante infecciones dérmicas ysistémicas de la cabrilla arenera (Paralabrax maculatofasciatus Steindachner: 1868) en cautiverio. SergioF. Martínez-Díaz y Benjamín Anguas-Vélez ........................................................................................ 347-356

    Estructura de la población, esfuerzo y rendimiento de tinte del caracol Plicopurpura pansa (Gould, 1853)en el Pacífico Mexicano. Population structure, effort and dye yielding of the snail Plicopurpura pansa(Gould, 1853) in the Mexican Pacific. Jesús Emilio Michel-Morfín, Ernesto A. Chávez y Lourdes González.................................................................................................................................................................. 357-368

    Grados de piritización en el Golfo de México en sedimentos influidos por los ríos Coatzacoalcos yGrijalva-Usumacinta. Degrees of pyritization in sediments of the Gulf of Mexico influenced by theCoatzacoalcos and Grijalva-Usumacinta rivers. G. Ortiz-Zamora, M. A. Huerta-Díaz, D.A. Salas-de-Leóny M. A. Monreal-Gómez ......................................................................................................................... 369-379

    Effect of irradiance on growth, photosynthesis, pigment content and nutrient consumption in densecultures of Rhodomonas salina (Wislouch) (Chryptophyceae). Efecto de la irradiancia en el crecimiento,fotosíntesis, contenido pigmentario y consumo de nutrientes en cultivos densos de Rhodomonas salina(Wislouch) (Cryptophyceae). Bartual, L. M. Lubián, J. A. Gálvez y F. X. Niell .................................. 381-392

    Aportes continentales de nutrientes y su posible influencia sobre las relaciones estequiométricas(DIN:P:Si) en las aguas del Noroeste del Mediterráneo. Continental nutrient input and its possible

  • 9

    influence over the stechiometrical relations (DIN:P:Si) in the Northwest Mediterranean waters. Olivos-Ortiz, M. Masó-Agustina y J. Camp-Sancho ........................................................................................ 393-406

    Sensitivity of Mediterranean amphipods and sea urchins to reference toxicants. Sensibilidad de deanfípodos y erizos del Mar Mediterráneo a sustancias tóxicas de referencia. Cesar, L. Marín-Guirao, R.Vita y A. Marín ........................................................................................................................................ 407-417

    Histochemical characteristics of the vitellogenic oocytes of the bluefin tuna Thunnus thynnus L.Características histoquímicas de los ovocitos vitelogénicos del atún aleta azul Thunnus thynnus L. C.Sarasquete, M. L. González-de-Canales, C. Piñuela, J. A. Muñoz-Cueto,C. Rendón, E. L Mañanos, F. J.Rodríguez-Gómez y E. Pasc ................................................................................................................. 419-431

    CIENCIAS MARINAS:Vol. 29, No. 4B, diciembre de 2003Cuidado materno en el lobo marino de California de Los Islotes, Golfo de California, México. Maternalcare in the California sea lion at Los Islotes, Gulf of California, Mexico. María Concepción García-Aguilary David Aurioles-Gamboa ...................................................................................................................... 573-583

    Efecto del nivel de proteína en la dieta y alimentos comerciales sobre el crecimiento y la alimentación enjuveniles del robalo blanco, Centropomus undecimalis (Bloch, 1792). Effect of dietary protein level andcommercial feeds on growth and feeding of juvenile common snook, Centropomus undecimalis (Bloch,1792). Vicente Gracia-López, Tsai García-Galano, Gabriela Gaxiola-Cortés y Jorge Pacheco-Campos................................................................................................................................................................... 585-594

    Soil heat exchange in Puerto Cuatreros tidal flats, Argentina. Intercambio de calor en el suelo en lasplanicies de marea de Puerto Cuatreros, Argentina. Débora Beigt, M. Cintia Píccolo y Gerardo M. Perillo................................................................................................................................................................. 595- 602

    Biochemical composition and energy content of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis of subtidal and rockyshore origin: Influence of environmental variables and source of mussel seed. Composición bioquímica ycontenido energético del mejillón Mytilus galloprovincialis de origen submareal e intermareal: Influenciade las variables ambientales y de su origen. L. Freites, M. J. Fernández-Reiriz y U. Labarta ..... 603-619

    Modern sands of the Gulf of Mexico: Discriminating fluvial and coastal sand composition. Arenas actualesdel Golfo de México: Discriminación entre la composición de arenas fluviales y costeras. J.J. Kasper-Zubillaga y A. Carranza-Edwards. ..................................................................................................... 621- 630

    Characterization of fish assemblages in a tropical coastal lagoon in the northwest Gulf of Mexico.Caracterización de los conjuntos de peces en una laguna costera tropical del noroeste del Golfo deMéxico. Silvia Díaz-Ruiz, Marco Aurelio Pérez-Hernández y Arturo Aguirre-León........................... 631- 644

    Effect of the seaweed Macrocystis pyrifera and a formulated diet on growth and fatty acid composition inthe green abalone, Haliotis fulgens, under commercial culture conditions. Efecto de la macroalgaMacrocystis pyrifera y una dieta formulada sobre el crecimiento y la composición de ácidos grasos en elabulón azul, Haliotis fulgens, en condiciones de cultivo comercial. Eduardo Durazo-Beltrán, Jorge F.Toro-Vázquez, Carlos Vásquez-Peláez y María Teresa Viana........................................................ 645- 654

    Composición bioquímica de nauplios y metanauplios de Artemia sp. (Crustacea, Anostraca) provenientede la salina artificial de Araya, nororiente de Venezuela. Biochemical composition of nauplii andmetanauplii of Artemia sp. (Crustacea, Anostraca) from the Araya saltworks, northeastern Venezuela. J.Miguel Guevara y César Lodeiros. ..................................................................................................... 655- 663

    Mytilus californianus transplantados como bioindicadores de surgencia a dos zonas en Baja California,México. Mytilus californianus transplanted as upwelling bioindicators to two areas in Baja California,Mexico. J.A. Segovia-Zavala, F. Delgadillo-Hinojosa, R. Vidal-Talamantes, A. Muñoz-Barbosa y E. A.Gutiérrez-Galindo ................................................................................................................................ 665- 675

    The taxonomic status of Porites sverdrupi, an endemic coral of the Gulf of California. Posicióntaxonómica de Porites sverdrupi, coral endémico del Golfo de California. R. Andrés López-Pérez, HéctorReyes-Bonilla, Ann F. Budd y Francisco Correa-Sandoval

  • 10

    CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:No. 11/03, November, 2003TROPICS Highlights Table of Atmospheric Indices Table T1 Table of SST Indices Table T2 Time SeriesSouthern Oscillation Index (SOI) Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies OLR Anomalies T1 Equatorial SOI T2200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies 500-mb Temperature Anomalies 30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3 850-mbZonal Wind Anomalies T4 Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5 Time-Longitude Sections Mean andAnomalous Sea Level Pressure T6 Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal Wind T7 Mean and AnomalousOLR T8 Mean and Anomalous SST T9 Pentad SLP Anomalies T10 Pentad OLR Anomalies T11 Pentad250-mb Velocity Potential Anomalies T12 Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind AnomaliesT 13 AnomalousEquatorial Zonal Wind T14 Anomalous and Mean Depth of the 20C Isotherm T15 Mean & Anomaly FieldsDepth of the 20C Isotherm T16 Subsurface Equatorial Pacific Temperatures T17 Tropical Strip SST T18SLP T19 850-mb Vector Wind T20 200-mb Vector Wind T21 200-mb Streamfunction T22 200-mbDivergence T23 200-mb Velocity Potential and Divergent Wind T24 OLR T25 SSM/I Satellite TropicalPrecipitation Estimates T26 Cloud Liquid Water T27 Vertically Integrated Water Vapor T28 Mean andAnomalous RH and Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector) T29 Mean and Anomalous RH and DivergentCirculation (Atlantic sector) T30 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (WesternPacific sector) T31 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (Eastern Pacific sector)T32 FORECAST FORUM Discussion Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts Canonical CorrelationAnalysis SST anomaly prediction F1 Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast F2 NCEP Coupled ModelForecasts Forecast SST ANOMALY F3 Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b NCEPMarkov Model Forecasts Forecast SST Anomalies F5 Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6 LDEO ForecastForecast of SST and Wind Stress F7 Forecast of Nino 3 SSTA F8 Linear Inverse Modeling ForecastsPredicted SST Anomalies F9 Forecasts of NINO 3 Anomalies F10 Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Model(HMC-3) F11 ENSO-CLIPER Model Forecast F12 IRI Niño 3.4 Summary F13 EXTRATROPICSHighlights Table of Teleconnection Indices-Part I Table E1 Table of Teleconnection Indices-Part II TableE2 Surface Temperature - Anomalies and Percentiles E1 Monthly Temperature Time Series E2 SurfacePrecipitation (CAMSOPI)- Anomaly and Percentiles E3 Time Series of Selected Global PrecipitationEstimates (CAMSOPI) E4 Time Series of U. S. Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI) E5 U. S.Precipitation E6 THESE TWO MAPS ARE NOT IN THE BULLETIN United States Surface Temperature- Anomalies and Percentiles United States Surface Precipitation - Total and Percentiles NorthernHemisphere Standardized Monthly Amplitudes of Selected Teleconnection Indices E7 StandardizedDaily Amplitudes of Selected Teleconnection Indices E8 Mean and Anomalous SLP E9 Mean andAnomalous 500-mb heights E10 Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E11 500-mb PersistenceE12 Time -Longitude Sections of 500-mb Height Anomalies E13 700-mb Storm Track E14 ArcticOscillation Index and 500-hPa Anomalies A2.1 Southern Hemisphere Troposphere Mean and AnomalousSLP E15 Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E16 Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E17500-mb Persistence E18 Time -Longitude Sections of 500-mb Height Anomalies E19 Stratosphere HeightAnomalies at selected levels S1 Height-longitude section S2 50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3 2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies S4 Total Ozone Anomalies (Time Series) S5 Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies(Map) S6 Daily vertical component of EP flux S7

    CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:No. 12/03, December, 2003TROPICS Highlights Table of Atmospheric Indices Table T1 Table of SST Indices Table T2 Time SeriesSouthern Oscillation Index (SOI) Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies OLR Anomalies T1 Equatorial SOI T2200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies 500-mb Temperature Anomalies 30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3 850-mbZonal Wind Anomalies T4 Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5 Time-Longitude Sections Mean andAnomalous Sea Level Pressure T6 Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal Wind T7 Mean and AnomalousOLR T8 Mean and Anomalous SST T9 Pentad SLP Anomalies T10 Pentad OLR Anomalies T11 Pentad250-mb Velocity Potential Anomalies T12 Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind AnomaliesT 13 AnomalousEquatorial Zonal Wind T14 Anomalous and Mean Depth of the 20C Isotherm T15 Mean & Anomaly FieldsDepth of the 20C Isotherm T16 Subsurface Equatorial Pacific Temperatures T17 Tropical Strip SST T18SLP T19 850-mb Vector Wind T20 200-mb Vector Wind T21 200-mb Streamfunction T22 200-mb

  • 11

    Divergence T23 200-mb Velocity Potential and Divergent Wind T24 OLR T25 SSM/I Satellite TropicalPrecipitation Estimates T26 Cloud Liquid Water T27 Vertically Integrated Water Vapor T28 Mean andAnomalous RH and Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector) T29 Mean and Anomalous RH and DivergentCirculation (Atlantic sector) T30 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (WesternPacific sector) T31 Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind and Divergent Circulation (Eastern Pacific sector)T32 Appendix 1: Outside Contributions Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1 Thermistor Chain Data A1.2TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitude Section Mean A1.3 TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitude SectionAnomalies A1.4 East Pacific SST and Sea Level A1.5 Sea Level Anomalies A1.6 Pacific Wind Stressand Anomalies A1.7 Satellite-Derived Surface Currents A1.8 FORECAST FORUM DiscussionCanonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts Canonical Correlation Analysis SST anomaly prediction F1Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast F2 NCEP Coupled Model Forecasts Forecast SST ANOMALY F3Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b NCEP Markov Model Forecasts Forecast SSTAnomalies F5 Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6 LDEO Forecast Forecast of SST and Wind Stress F7 Forecastof Nino 3 SSTA F8 Linear Inverse Modeling Forecasts Predicted SST Anomalies F9 Forecasts of NINO 3Anomalies F10 Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Model (HMC-3) F11 ENSO-CLIPER Model Forecast F12IRI Niño 3.4 Summary F13 EXTRATROPICS Highlights Table of Teleconnection Indices - Table E1Surface Temperature - Anomalies and Percentiles E1 Monthly Temperature Time Series E2 SurfacePrecipitation (CAMSOPI)- Anomaly and Percentiles E3 Time Series of Selected Global PrecipitationEstimates (CAMSOPI) E4 Time Series of U. S. Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI) E5 U. S.Precipitation E6 THESE TWO MAPS ARE NOT IN THE BULLETIN United States Surface Temperature- Anomalies and Percentiles United States Surface Precipitation - Total and Percentiles NorthernHemisphere Standardized Monthly Amplitudes of Selected Teleconnection Indices E7 StandardizedDaily Amplitudes of Selected Teleconnection Indices E8 Mean and Anomalous SLP E9 Mean andAnomalous 500-mb heights E10 Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E11 500-mb PersistenceE12 Time -Longitude Sections of 500-mb Height Anomalies E13 700-mb Storm Track E14 SouthernHemisphere Troposphere Mean and Anomalous SLP E15 Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E16Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E17 500-mb Persistence E18 Time -Longitude Sections of500-mb Height Anomalies E19 Stratosphere Height Anomalies at selected levels S1 Height-longitudesection S2 50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3 2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies S4 Total OzoneAnomalies (Time Series) S5 Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map) S6 Daily vertical component of EP fluxS7 Appendix 2: Additional Figures Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa Anomalies A2.1 Snow Cover A2.2

    COAST & SEA:Vol. 11, No. 2, 20032 INCREASING POPULATION -COMMUNITY BENEFIT OR LIABILITY?

    Balancing community growth and resource conservation presents challenges to Louisiana'speople.

    6 HANDS ON: HUMAN ACTIVITIES CONTINUE SHAPE ATCHAFALAYA BASINManagers work to restore balance between the needs of people and the environment in anextraordinary Louisiana wilderness.

    12 DRIVING GROWTH IN ST. TAMMANY PARISHCommuter culture shapes the suburban landscape in the state's fastest-growing parish.

    15 SEA GRANT NEWS

    CONTRIBUTIONS IN SCIENCE:No. 498, 2003: Geology and vertebrate paleontology of the early Pliocene site ofKanapoi, Northern KenyaTABLE OF CONTENTS

    Introduction.......................................................................................................................................................... 1

    John M. Harris and Meave G. Leakey

  • 12

    Stratigraphy and Depositional Setting of the Pliocene Kanapoi Formation, .................................................. 9

    Lower Kerio Valley, Kenya Craig S. Feibel

    Fossil Fish Remains fram the Pliocene Kanapoi Site, Kenya ....................................................................... 21

    Kathlyn Stewart

    Early Pliocene Tetrapod Remains fram Kanapoi, Lake Turkana Basin, Kenya ........................................... 39

    John M. Harris, Meave G. Leakey, and Thure E. Cerling with an Appendix by Alisa]. Winkler

    Carnivora fram the Kanapoi Hominid Site, Turkana Basin, Northern Kenya..............................................115

    Lars Werdelin

    COPEIA:No. 4, December 4, 2003Articles

    Phylogeny of Living Parasitic Lampreys (Petromyzontiformes) Based on Morphological Data. Howard S.Gill, Claude B. Renaud, François Chapleau, Richard L. Mayden, and Ian C. Potter, ...................... 687-703

    Aquatic and Terrestrial Locomotor Performance in a Semiaquatic Plethodontid Salamander (Pseudotritonruber): Influence of Acute Temperature, Thermal Acclimation, and Body Size. Glenn A. Marvin, . 704-713

    Phylogenetic Analysis of the Asian Cyprinid Genus Danio (Teleostei, Cyprinidae). Fang Fang, ... 714-728

    Reproductive and Nesting Ecology of the Yellow-Blotched Map Turtle, Graptemys flavimaculata:Implications for Conservation and Management. Brian D. Horne, Robert J. Brauman, Megan J. C. Moore,and Richard A. Seigel, .......................................................................................................................... 729-738

    Analysis of Three Cisco Forms (Coregonus, Salmonidae) from Lake Saganaga and Adjacent Lakes Nearthe Minnesota/Ontario Border. David A. Etnier and Christopher E. Skelton, ................................... 739-749

    Geographic Variation in the Advertisement Call Structure of Litoria verreauxii (Anura: Hylidae). Michael J.Smith, William Osborne, and David Hunter, ........................................................................................ 750-758

    Life-History Characteristics of the Endangered Salish Sucker (Catostomus sp.) and Their Implications forManagement. Mike P. Pearson and Michael C. Healey, .................................................................... 759-768

    Ontogenetic Variation in Venom Composition and Diet of Crotalus oreganus concolor: A Case of VenomPaedomorphosis?. Stephen P. Mackessy, Kwame Williams, and Kyle G. Ashton, ......................... 769-782

    New Species of Gambusia (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae) from Del Rio, Texas. Gary P. Garrett andRobert J. Edwards, ................................................................................................................................ 783-788

    New Microhylid Frog (Plethodontohyla) with a Supraocular Crest from Madagascar. Miguel Vences andFrank Glaw, ........................................................................................................................................... 789-793

    ‘Cichlasoma’ scitulum: A New Species of Cichlid Fish from the Río de La Plata Region in Argentina,Brazil, and Uruguay. Old ich í an and Sven O. Kullander, ................................................................ 794-802

    Lumpenopsis clitella: A New Species of Prickleback (Teleostei: Stichaeidae) from Southern California,with Comments on Lumpenopsis Soldatov. Philip A. Hastings and H. J. Walker Jr., ...................... 803-809

    Symphurus bathyspilus: A New Cynoglossid Flatfish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae) fromDeepwaters of the Indo-West Pacific. Trevor J. Krabbenhoft and Thomas A. Munroe, .................. 810-817

    Liparis adiastolus (Teleostei, Liparidae): A New Snailfish Species from the Littoral Zone of theNortheastern Pacific, and Redescription of Liparis rutteri (Gilbert and Snyder, 1898). David L. Stein, CarlE. Bond, and David Misitano, ............................................................................................................... 818-823

    New Species of Cyphotilapia (Perciformes: Cichlidae) from Lake Tanganyika, Africa. Tetsumi Takahashiand Kazuhiro Nakaya, ........................................................................................................................... 824-832

  • 13

    On the Status of Rhombus cocosensis Bleeker, and Description of a New Species of EngyprosoponBased on Misidentification of This Species (Pleuronectiformes: Bothidae). Dannie A. Hensley, ... 833-837

    Ontogeny of the Accessory Neural Arch in Pristigasteroid Clupeomorphs and Its Bearing on theHomology of the Otophysan Claustrum (Teleostei). Mário de Pinna and Terry Grande, ................ 838-845

    Mating Opportunities of Female Gopher Tortoises, Gopherus polyphemus, in Relation to Spatial Isolationof Females and Their Burrows. Melissa D. Boglioli, Craig Guyer, and William K. Michener, ......... 846-850

    Oral Grasping: A Distinctive Behavior of Cyprinids for Maintaining Station in Flowing Water. S. ReidAdams, Ginny L. Adams, and Jan Jeffrey Hoover, ............................................................................. 851-857

    Positive Relationship between Abdominal Coloration and Dermal Melanin Density in PhrynosomatidLizards. Vanessa S. Quinn and Diana K. Hews, ................................................................................ 858-864

    Differential Growth and Mortality Affect Sexual Size Dimorphism in Vipera latastei. J. C. Brito and R.Rebelo, ................................................................................................................................................... 865-871

    Using External Vertebral Growth Rings to Assess Longevity in the Bengal Monitor (Varanus bengalensis).Gregory M. Erickson, ............................................................................................................................ 872-878

    Suction Feeding in the Pipid Frog, Hymenochirus boettgeri: Kinematic and Behavioral Considerations.Mason N. Dean, .................................................................................................................................... 879-886

    Sex-Related Differences in Metabolic Rate and Locomotor Performance in Breeding SpottedSalamanders (Ambystoma maculatum). Michael S. Finkler, Mark T. Sugalski, and Dennis L. Claussen, ...887-893

    Gregarious Behavior of Nesting Turtles (Carettochelys insculpta) Does Not Reduce Nest Predation Risk.J. Sean Doody, Rachel A. Sims, and Arthur Georges, ....................................................................... 894-898

    Risk Level and Thermal Costs Affect the Choice of Escape Strategy and Refuge Use in the Wall Lizard,Podarcis muralis. Luisa Amo, Pilar López, and José Martín, ............................................................ 899-905

    Winter Growth and Sex Ratio of a Northern Population of Anolis carolinensis (Sauria: Polychrotidae).David C. Bishop and Arthur C. Echternacht, ....................................................................................... 906-909

    CRUSTACEANA:Vol. 76, Part. 7, July 2003Surface area and allometric growth relationships among major body parts of the American lobster,Homarus americanusD. Kapareiko, R. A. Robohm, J. Ziskowski & G. R. Sennefelder ................................................................769

    Autecology of the isopod, Cyathura carinata (Krøyer, 1847) in the Ria Formosa (Algarve, Portugal)Sandra Cruz, João Carlos Marques, Sofia Gamito & Irene Martins ...........................................................781

    Population dynamics of Penilia avirostris (Dana, 1852) (Cladocera) in a tropical bayA. Marazzo & J. L. Valentin ...........................................................................................................................803

    Population size-structure of harvested deep-sea red crabs (Chaceon quinquedens) in the northwestAtlantic OceanJames R. Weinberg & Charles Keith ............................................................................................................819

    Embryonic and early postembryonic development of the burrowing crayfish, Virilastacus araucanius(Faxon, 1914) (Decapoda, Parastacidae) under laboratory conditionsErich H. Rudolph & Carolina S. Rojas ..........................................................................................................835

    A study of the oxygen consumption rates in the copepod, Neolovenula allu-audi (Calanoida)Gema Parra, Raquel Jiménez-Melero & Francisco Guerrero .....................................................................851

    A comparison of antennule structure in a surface- and a cave-dwelling crayfish, genus Orconectes(Decapoda, Astacidae)Robert E. Ziemba, Anna Simpson, Rebecca Hopper & Robin L. Cooper ..................................................859

  • 14

    Oplophorid shrimp (Decapoda, Caridea) from an Arctic hydrothermal ventJoel W. Martin .................................................................................................................................................871

    Notes and news...............................................................................................................................................879

    A new amphipod for the Turkish fauna: Pontogammarus maeoticus (Sowinsky, 1894)Ahmet Kocata , Tuncer Kata an, Murat Özbek & Murat Sezgin ...............................................................879

    An anomalous specimen of Scyllarides latus (Decapoda, Scyllaridae)N. Spanò, S. Ragonese & M. L. Bianchini ....................................................................................................885

    Brachycarpus biunguiculatus (Lucas, 1846): a new species of shrimp for the Adriatic Sea (Decapoda,Caridea)M. Kirinci .......................................................................................................................................................891

    Review ............................................................................................................................................................895

    E. Mente, 2003. Nutrition, physiology and metabolism of crustaceansPeter P. Jaros .................................................................................................................................................895

    CRUSTACEANA:Vol. 76, Part. 8, September 2003On the systematic position of Lambrachaeus Alcock, 1895 (Brachyura, Parthenopidae)

    Peter K. L. Ng & Colin L. McLay ...................................................................................................................897

    A new cave amphipod of the genus Gammarus from Yunnan, China

    Zhong-E Hou & Shuqiang Li ..........................................................................................................................917

    Trawling lesions in some decapod crustaceans: considerations with regard to governmental inspections

    T. Bottari, P. Rinelli & A. Panebianco ...........................................................................................................927

    A new hypothesis of decapod phylogeny

    Christopher J. Dixon, Shane T. Ahyong & Frederick R. Schram ................................................................935

    An updated checklist of the continental copepod fauna of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, with notes onits regional associations

    Eduardo Suárez-Morales & Janet W. Reid ..................................................................................................977

    Reproduction and population dynamics of the temperate freshwater shrimp, Neocaridina denticulatadenticulata (De Haan, 1844), in a Korean stream

    Chul-Woong Oh, Chae-Woo Ma, Richard G. Hartnoll & Hae-Lip Suh .......................................................993

    Notes and news ............................................................................................................................................1017

    Feeding habits of the sand shrimp, Crangon uritai Hayashi & Kim, 1999, in the central Seto Inland Sea,Japan

    Yukio Hanamura & Masanobu Matsuoka ...................................................................................................1017

    ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:Vol. 44, No. 7, October 2003The future of the dolomitic springs after mine closure on the Far West Rand, Gauteng, RSA.pp. 751 - 770

    C. J. U. Swart, A. R. James, R. J. Kleywegt, et al

    Retrospective analysis of the impacts of major hurricanes on sediments in the lower Everglades andFlorida Bay ...................................................................................................................................... pp. 771 - 780

    W.-J. Kang and J. H. Trefry

  • 15

    Detection of 3H and 85Kr in groundwater from arsenic-bearing crystalline bedrock of the Goose Riverbasin, Maine ................................................................................................................................... pp. 781 - 789

    W. C. Sidle and R. A. Fischer

    Physico-chemical seasonal variability of a tropical estuary: major and minor elements in water and air pp.790 - 798

    L. Rosales Hoz, A. Carranza Edwards, P. Carvajal Romero, et al

    Sequential extraction procedure in columns. Part 1: Development and description of a new method ..... pp.799 - 804

    F. Wisotzky and N. Cremer

    Sequential extraction procedure in columns—part 2: application of a new method ................. pp. 805 - 810

    F. Wisotzky and N. Cremer

    Mechanism analysis of hazards caused by the interaction between groundwater and geo-environment pp.811 - 819

    Y. Wu

    Use of an artificial neural network for analysis of the susceptibility to landslides at Boun, Korea .. pp. 820 -833

    Saro Lee, Joo-Hyung Ryu, Moung-Jin Lee, et al

    Application of matrix analysis in delineating sinkhole risk areas along highway (I-70 near Frederick,Maryland) ........................................................................................................................................ pp. 834 - 842

    Wanfang Zhou, Barry F. Beck, Angela L. Adams

    Estimating groundwater discharge into a lake through underwater springs by using GIS technologies .. pp.843 - 851

    Zacharias, E. Dimitriou, T. Koussouris

    The importance of hydrogeological and hydrological investigations in the residential area: a case study inBurdur, Turkey ................................................................................................................................ pp. 852 - 861

    A. Davraz, R. Karaguzel, I. I. Soyaslan

    Modification of the liquefaction potential index and liquefaction susceptibility mapping for a liquefaction-prone area (Inegol,Turkey) ............................................................................................................ pp. 862 - 871

    H. Sonmez

    Views and news ............................................................................................................................. pp. 872 - 875

    Book reviews .............................................................................................................................................p. 876

    Events ............................................................................................................................................ pp. 877 - 880

    ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:Vol. 44, No. 8, November 2003Comparison of aquifer vulnerability assessment techniques. Application to the Néblon river basin(Belgium) ............................................................................................................................................... 881 - 892

    Radu Constantin Gogu, Vincent Hallet, Alain Dassargues

    Explorative data analysis of heavy metal contaminated soil using multidimensional spatial regression 893- 904

    Ute Schnabel and Olaf Tietje

  • 16

    The geochemistry of selenium associated with coal waste in the Elk River Valley, Canada .......... 905 - 913

    C. Lussier, V. Veiga, S. Baldwin

    Imprints of environmental pollution on laterite/clay and groundwater of Eloor-Kalamassery Industrial Belt,Kerala State, India ............................................................................................................................... 914 - 918

    V. Sobha and M. Anish

    Characterization of anthropogenic and natural sources of acid rock drainage at the Cinnamon Gulchabandoned mine land inventory site, Summit County, Colorado ..................................................... 919 - 932

    David A. Bird

    Urbanization pressure increases potential for soils-related hazards, Denton County, Texas ...... . 933 - 938

    Harry F. L. Williams

    Geostatistical analysis of arsenic concentration in groundwater in Bangladesh using disjunctive kriging................................................................................................................................................................ 939 - 948

    I. Gaus, D. G. Kinniburgh, J. C. Talbot, et al

    GIS-based landslide susceptibility mapping for a problematic segment of the natural gas pipeline, Hendek(Turkey) ............................................................................................................................................... . 949 - 962

    E. Çevik and T. Topal

    Application of ground penetrating radar in mapping and monitoring landfill sites ........................... 963 - 967

    T. Splajt, G. Ferrier, L. E. Frostick

    Evaluation of remedial alternatives for a petroleum contaminated unconfined aquifer with fluctuatinggroundwater level ................................................................................................................................. 968 - 978

    J. Y. Lee, C. H. Lee, K. K. Lee

    Engineering characteristics and environmental impacts of the expansive Ankara Clay, and swellingmaps for SW and central parts of the Ankara (Turkey) metropolitan area ...................................... 979 - 992

    Zeynal Abiddin Erguler and Resat Ulusay

    November 2003 ............................................................................................................................................. 993

    Book reviews

    November 2003 .................................................................................................................................... 994 - 995

    Events

    November 2003 .................................................................................................................................. . 996 - 998

    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:Vol. 29, No. 7, January 2004Preliminary exploration of the relationships between soil characteristics and PAH desorption andbiodegradation, ....................................................................................................................................... 887-894

    Sangchul Hwang and Teresa J. Cutright

    Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilizedsewage sludge, ..................................................................................................................................... 895-900

    D. C. Su and J. W. C. Wong

    Relationships between spatial and temporal variabilities in airborne metal distributions in Won Ju City,Korea, Ki-Hyun Kim................................................................................................................................ 901-906

    Estimation of septic tank setback distances based on transport of E. coli and F-RNA phages, ..... 907-921

  • 17

    Liping Pang, Murray Close, Mark Goltz, Lester Sinton, Helen Davies, Carollyn Hall and Greg Stanton

    Genotoxic and biochemical responses in caged eel (Anguilla anguilla L.) after short-term exposure toharbour waters......................................................................................................................................... 923-929

    V. L. Maria, A. C. Correia and M. A. Santos

    Asbestos exposure among Seoul metropolitan subway workers during renovation of subway air-conditioning systems,............................................................................................................................. 931-934

    Il Je Yu, Chan Young Yoo, Yong Hyun Chung, Jeong Hee Han, Sook Young Yhang, Gye Mook Yu andKyung Seuk Song

    Heavy metal distribution and controlling factors within coastal plain sediments, Bells Creek catchment,southeast Queensland, Australia, .......................................................................................................... 935-948

    Tania Liaghati, Micaela Preda and Malcolm Cox

    Heavy metals in fish (Solea vulgaris, Anguilla anguilla and Liza aurata) from salt marshes on the southernAtlantic coast of Spain, .......................................................................................................................... 949-956

    José Usero, Carmen Izquierdo, José Morillo and Ignacio Gracia

    ssessment of arsenic and heavy metal concentrations in water and sediments of the Rio Grande at ElPaso-Juarez metroplex region, ............................................................................................................. 957-971

    J. V. Rios-Arana, E. J. Walsh and J. L. Gardea-Torresdey

    Effects of forms and rates of potassium fertilizers on cadmium uptake by two cultivars of spring wheat(Triticum aestivum, L.), ........................................................................................................................... 973-978

    Zhong-Qiu Zhao, Yong-Guan Zhu, Hui-Ying Li, Sally E. Smith and F. Andrew Smith

    Determination of heavy metal concentrations in street dusts in Istanbul E-5 highway, ................... 979-985

    Naim Sezgin, H. Kurtulus Ozcan, Goksel Demir, Semih Nemlioglu and Cuma Bayat

    Comparison of the radiological dose from the Cerro Grande fire to a natural wildfire, ..................... 987-993

    John M. Volkerding

    Anguilla anguilla L. plasma cortisol, lactate and glucose responses to abietic acid, dehydroabietic acidand retene,............................................................................................................................................ 995-1000

    M. Teles, V. L. Maria, M. Pacheco and M. A. Santos

    Fractionation studies and bioaccumulation of sediment-bound heavy metals in Kolleru lake by edible fish,.............................................................................................................................................................. 1001-1008

    K. Chandra Sekhar, N. S. Chary, C. T. Kamala, D. S. Suman Raj and A. Sreenivasa Rao

    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:Vol. 29, No. 8, February 2004Assessment of groundwater contamination by nitrate leaching from intensive vegetable cultivation usinggeographical information system, ..................................................................................................... 1009-1017

    Insaf S. Babiker, Mohamed A. A. Mohamed, H. Terao, Kikuo Kato and Keiichi Ohta

    Assessment of contamination by heavy metals and petroleum hydrocarbons in sediments of MontevideoHarbour (Uruguay), ............................................................................................................................. 1019-1028

    Pablo Muniz, Eva Danulat, Beatriz Yannicelli, Javier García-Alonso, Gabriela Medina and Márcia C.Bícego

    Phytoaccumulation of heavy metals by aquatic plants,.................................................................... 1029-1039

    M. Kamal, A. E. Ghaly, N. Mahmoud and R. Côté

  • 18

    Monitoring environmental pollution in Erzurum by chemical analysis of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.)needles, .............................................................................................................................................. 1041-1047

    Sevgi Yilmaz and Murat Zengin

    Effect of NOM characteristics on brominated organics formation by ozonation, Pages 1049-1055 Winn-Jung Huang, Lu-Yun Chen and Hsiao-Shan Peng

    Monitoring of eutrophication and nutrient limitation in the Izmir Bay (Turkey) before and after WastewaterTreatment Plant, ................................................................................................................................. 1057-1062

    A. Kontas, F. Kucuksezgin, O. Altay and E. Uluturhan

    Probabilistic indicators of atmospheric transport for regional monitoring and emergency preparednesssystems,............................................................................................................................................... 1063-1069

    Alexander Mahura and Alexander Baklanov

    Volumetric assessment of airborne fungi in two sections of a rural indoor dairy cattle shed, ...... 1071-1078

    Atin Adhikari, Moon M. Sen, Swati Gupta-Bhattacharya and Sunirmal Chanda

    The composting potential of different organic solid wastes: experience from the island of Crete1079 -1089

    T. Manios

    Natural gamma radiation map (MARNA) and indoor radon levels in Spain, ................................. 1091-1096

    L. S. Quindós Poncela, P. L. Fernández, J. Gómez Arozamena, C. Sainz, J. A. Fernández, E. SuarezMahou, J. L. Martin Matarranz and M. C. Cascón

    Toxicities and tolerances of Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn in a primary producer (Isochrysis galbana) and in aprimary consumer (Perna viridis), ..................................................................................................... 1097-1104

    C. K. Yap, A. Ismail, H. Omar and S. G. Tan

    Battling Resistance to Antibiotics and Pesticides: An Economic Approach, ...........................................1105

    Niklas Rudholm

    Polymers, the Environment And Sustainable Development: By Adisa Azapagic, Alan Emsley and IanHamerton (edited by Ian Hamerton), ................................................................................................ 1107-1108

    Jason Leadbitter

    Corrigendum to "Volatile organic compounds concentrations in residential indoor and outdoor and itspersonal exposure in Korea" [Environ. Int. 29 (2003) 79-85], .................................................................. 1109

    Busoon Son, Patrick Breysse and Wonho Yang

    Author index for Volume 29, .............................................................................................................. 1111-1116

    Subject index for Volume 29, ............................................................................................................ 1117-1130

    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:Vol. 30, No. 1, March 2004Levels of "toxic" and "essential" metals in samples of bovine milk from various dairy farms in Calabria,Italy, ..................................................................................................................................................................1-6

    P. Licata, D. Trombetta, M. Cristani, F. Giofrè, D. Martino, M. Calò and F. Naccari

    Polychlorinated biphenyl levels in adipose tissue of primiparous women in Turkey, ...............................7-10

    Ismet Çok and M. Hakan atiro lu

    Speciation of elements in sediment samples collected at lakes Volvi and Koronia, N. Greece, .......... 11-17

    K. Fytianos and A. Lourantou

  • 19

    Monitoring microbial biomass and respiration in different soils from the Czech Republic--a summary ofresults, ..........................................................................................................................................................19-30

    Jakub Hofman, Ladislav Du ek, Jana Klánová, Jitka Bezchlebová and Ivan Holoubek Irreversible sorptionof pentachlorophenol to sediments: experimental observations, ............................................................ 31-37

    Ying-Xu Chen, Hua-Lin Chen, Yun-Tai Xu and Meng-Wei Shen

    Allozyme polymorphisms and heavy metal levels in the green-lipped mussel Perna viridis (Linnaeus)collected from contaminated and uncontaminated sites in Malaysia, .....................................................39-46

    C. K. Yap, S. G. Tan, A. Ismail and H. Omar

    Disinfection of wastewater with peracetic acid: a review, ........................................................................47-55

    Mehmet Kitis

    Cadmium biosorption by cells of Spirulina platensis TISTR 8217 immobilized in alginate and silica gel, ....57-63

    N. Rangsayatorn, P. Pokethitiyook, E. S. Upatham and G. R. Lanza

    Plant community tolerant to trace elements growing on the degraded soils of São Domingos mine in thesouth east of Portugal: environmental implications, ................................................................................ 65-72

    H. Freitas, M. N. V. Prasad and J. Pratas

    Atmospheric versus lithogenic contribution to the composition of first- and second-order stream waters inSeoul and its vicinity, ................................................................................................................................. 73-85

    Gi-Tak Chae, Seong-Taek Yun, Ki-Hyun Kim, Pyeong-Koo Lee and Byoung-Young Choi

    Partitioning of trace metals between soft tissues and shells of Patella aspera,......................................87-98

    A. Cravo, M. J. Bebianno and P. Foster

    Environmental impact of unleaded gasolines in the bay of Cádiz (Spain), ...........................................99-104

    R. A. Ligero, M. Casas-Ruiz, M. Barrera, F. López-Aguayo, D. Sales and D. García

    Nutrient chemistry of River Pinios (Thessalia, Greece), .................................................................... 105-115

    D. Bellos, T. Sawidis and I. Tsekos

    Development of a rapid method for direct detection of tet(M) genes in soil from Danish farmland, 117-122

    Yvonne Agersø, Gitte Sengeløv and Lars Bogø Jensen

    Environmental and health consequences of depleted uranium use in the 1991 Gulf War, .............. 123-134

    Henryk Bem and Firyal Bou-Rabee

    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:Vol. 127, No. 2, 2004Effects of Bauxsol™ and biosolids on soil conditions of acid-generating mine spoil for plant growth ....157-167

    G. Maddocks, C. Lin and D. McConchie

    Possible evidence for transport of an iron cyanide complex by plants .............................................. 169-173

    M. Samiotakis and S. D. Ebbs

    Study of metal fractionation in river sediments. A comparison between kinetic and sequential extractionprocedures.............................................................................................................................................. 175-182

    M. Jesús Gismera, Javier Lacal, Pilar da Silva, Rosario García, M. Teresa Sevilla and Jesús R. Procopio

  • 20

    Effects of heavy metals on population growth and metallothionein gene expression in the mosquito Culexquinquefasciatus, from Calcutta, India ................................................................................................. 183-193

    Sagartirtha Sarkar, Asish K. Duttagupta and Tarun K. Mal

    Accumulation and distribution of platinum and rhodium in the European eel Anguilla anguilla followingaqueous exposure to metal salts ....................................................................................................... 195-202 S

    Zimmermann, U. Baumann, H. Taraschewski and B. Sures

    Mussel-based monitoring of trace metal and organic contaminants along the east coast of China usingPerna viridis and Mytilus edulis............................................................................................................. 203-216

    C. N. Fung, J. C. W. Lam, G. J. Zheng, D. W. Connell, I. Monirith, S. Tanabe, B. J. Richardson and P. K. S. Lam

    Probabilistic risk assessment of abalone Haliotis diversicolor supertexta exposed to waterborne zinc ....217-227

    Chung-Min Liao and Min-Pei Ling

    Using sequential indicator simulation to assess the uncertainty of delineating heavy-metal contaminatedsoils .................................................................................................................................................. 229-238 Kai-

    Wei Juang, Yue-Shin Chen and Dar-Yuan Lee

    Geostatistical analyses and hazard assessment on soil lead in Silvermines area, Ireland.............. 239-248

    David McGrath, Chaosheng Zhang and Owen T. Carton

    Reliability of different sampling densities for estimating and mapping lichen diversity in biomonitoringstudies................................................................................................................................................. 249-256 M

    Ferretti, E. Brambilla, G. Brunialti, F. Fornasier, C. Mazzali, P. Giordani and P. L. Nimis

    The effects of atmospheric nitrogen deposition in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and southernWyoming, USA––a critical review......................................................................................................... 257-269

    Douglas A. Burns

    The possible influence of volcanic emissions on atmospheric aerosols in the city of Colima, Mexico... 271-279

    Javier Miranda, Francisco Zepeda and Ignacio Galindo

    Exploring field vegetation reflectance as an indicator of soil contamination in river floodplains ...... 281-290

    L. Kooistra, E. A. L. Salas, J. G. P. W. Clevers, R. Wehrens, R. S. E. W. Leuven, P. H. Nienhuis and L. M.C. Buydens

    Seasonal effect on ammonia nitrogen removal by constructed wetlands treating polluted river water insouthern Taiwan..................................................................................................................................... 291-301

    Shuh-Ren Jing and Ying-Feng Lin

    Effects of environmental concentrations of atrazine on hemocyte density and phagocytic activity in thepond snail Lymnaea stagnalis (Gastropoda, Pulmonata) ................................................................... 303-311

    Jacqueline Russo and Laurent Lagadic

    Regarding the rodent sperm analysis (RSA) article in the Journal of Environmental Pollution........ 313-314

    Brian Tucker

    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:Vol. 127, No. 3, 2004

  • 21

    Distribution of sewage pollution around a maritime Ant