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Aitor Laza-Martínez
Researcher at University of the Basque Country
Publications - 36
Citations - 987
Aitor Laza-Martínez is an academic researcher from University of the Basque Country. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Bay. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 36 publications receiving 788 citations.
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Morphological and genetic characterization of benthic dinoflagellates of the genera Coolia, Ostreopsis and Prorocentrum from the south-eastern Bay of Biscay
TL;DR: The most common taxa were Coolia monotis, Ostreopsis cf.
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Is metabarcoding suitable for estuarine plankton monitoring? A comparative study with microscopy
David Abad,Aitor Albaina,Mikel Aguirre,Aitor Laza-Martínez,Ibon Uriarte,Arantza Iriarte,Fernando Villate,Andone Estonba +7 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that metabarcoding is a powerful approach with excellent possibilities for use in plankton monitoring, early detection of NIS and plankton biodiversity shifts.
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Novel unarmored dinoflagellates from the toxigenic family kareniaceae (gymnodiniales): five new species of Karlodinium and one new Takayama from the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean
TL;DR: Six new species of unarmored dinoflagellates in the family Kareniaceae were isolated from the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean in March 2006 and are well supported based either on their morphology or molecular phylogeny.
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Characterization of a Strain of Fukuyoa paulensis (Dinophyceae) from the Western Mediterranean Sea
TL;DR: This is the first report of the Gambierdiscus lineage from the western Mediterranean Sea, which is cooler than its eastern basin, and it is revealed that the Mediterranean strain belongs to F. paulensis and that it bears LSU rDNA sequences identical to New Zealand, Australian, and Brazilian strains.
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Phytoplankton pigment patterns in a temperate estuary: from unialgal cultures to natural assemblages
TL;DR: The great diversity of pigment patterns present within several phytoplankton classes is revealed and the difficulty to infer the structure of phy toplankon assemblages in estuarine waters only from pigments is revealed.