scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre

EducationUcluelet, British Columbia, Canada
About: Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre is a education organization based out in Ucluelet, British Columbia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Hagfish & Pacific hagfish. The organization has 215 authors who have published 235 publications receiving 6236 citations. The organization is also known as: Bamfield Marine Station & BMSC.
Topics: Hagfish, Pacific hagfish, Eptatretus, Kelp, Excretion


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
29 Oct 2004-Science
TL;DR: Declining frequencies of spontaneous asymmetry reversal throughout vertebrate evolution suggest that heart development has become more canalized, suggesting genetic assimilation is a common mode of evolution.
Abstract: Because of its simplicity, the binary-switch nature of left-right asymmetry permits meaningful comparisons among many different organisms. Phylogenetic analyses of asymmetry variation, inheritance, and molecular mechanisms reveal unexpected insights into how development evolves. First, directional asymmetry, an evolutionary novelty, arose from nonheritable origins almost as often as from mutations, implying that genetic assimilation ("phenotype precedes genotype") is a common mode of evolution. Second, the molecular pathway directing hearts leftward-the nodal cascade-varies considerably among vertebrates (homology of form does not require homology of development) and was possibly co-opted from a preexisting asymmetrical chordate organ system. Finally, declining frequencies of spontaneous asymmetry reversal throughout vertebrate evolution suggest that heart development has become more canalized.

389 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The first comprehensive and well‐supported molecular phylogeny for the ALL complex of the Laminariales is presented, maintaining the three recognized families, but with vastly different compositions, as well as proposing the Costariaceae fam.
Abstract: Every year numerous ecological, biochemical, and physiological studies are performed using members of the order Laminariales. Despite the fact that kelp are some of the most intensely studied macroalgae in the world, there is significant debate over the classification within and among the three ‘‘derived’’ families, the Alariaceae, Laminariaceae, and Lessoniaceae (ALL). Molecular phylogenies published for the ALL families have generated hypotheses strongly at odds with the current morphological taxonomy; however, conflicting phylogenetic hypotheses and consistently low levels of support realized in all of these studies have resulted in conservative approaches to taxonomic revisions. In order to resolve relationships within this group we have sequenced over 6000bp from regions in the nuclear, chloroplast, and mitochondrial genomes and included 42 taxa in Bayesian, neighbor-joining, and parsimony analyses. The result is the first comprehensive and well-supported molecular phylogeny for the ALL complex of the Laminariales. We maintain the three recognized families (Alariaceae, Laminariaceae, and Lessoniaceae), but with vastly different compositions, as well as propose the Costariaceae fam. nov. for Agarum, Costaria, Dictyoneurum, and Thalassiophyllum, the only genera in the Laminariales with flattened, occasionally terete, stipes and either a perforate or reticulate blade. In addition, our data strongly support a split of the genus Laminaria. We resurrect the genus Saccharina Stackhouse for the Laminaria clade that does not contain L. digitata (Hudson) J.V. Lamouroux, the type of the genus. Key index words: Costariaceae; Laminariales; long branch attraction; nested analyses; phylogenetics; Saccharina

300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study is the first, to the authors' knowledge, to show a tight, phylogenetically independent correlation between hypoxia tolerance, traits involved in dictating O2 extraction capacity and the distribution of a group of closely related fish species, sculpins from the family Cottidae, along the nearshore marine environment.
Abstract: The ability of an organism to acquire O2 from its environment is key to survival and can play an important role in dictating a species' ecological distribution. This study is the first, to our knowledge, to show a tight, phylogenetically independent correlation between hypoxia tolerance, traits involved in dictating O2 extraction capacity and the distribution of a group of closely related fish species, sculpins from the family Cottidae, along the nearshore marine environment. Sculpins with higher hypoxia tolerance, measured as low critical O2 tensions (Pcrit), inhabit the O2 variable intertidal zones, while species with lower hypoxia tolerance inhabit the more O2 stable subtidal zone or freshwater. Hypoxia tolerance is phylogenetically independently associated with an enhanced O2 extraction capacity, with three principal components accounting for 75 per cent of the variation in Pcrit: routine O2 consumption rate; mass-specific gill surface area; and whole blood haemoglobin (Hb)–O2-binding affinity (P50). Variation in whole blood Hb–O2 P50 is strongly correlated with the intrinsic O2-binding properties of the purified Hb while the differences in the concentration of the allosteric Hb modulators, ATP and GTP, provide a Hb system with substantial plasticity for survival in a highly O2 variable environment.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2005-Ecology
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated summer wrack deposition of up to 140 Mg (dry mass)/km shoreline in Barkley Sound, British Columbia, and found that the onshore deposition of macroalgal and macrophyte wrack provides a potentially significant marine subsidy to intertidal and supratidal herbivore and decomposer communities.
Abstract: The onshore deposition of macroalgal and macrophyte wrack provides a potentially significant marine subsidy to intertidal and supratidal herbivore and decomposer communities. Based on the study of daily input loads to beaches, we estimated summer wrack deposition of up to 140 Mg (dry mass)/km shoreline in Barkley Sound, British Columbia. However, input rates were highly variable depending on beach type, nearshore hydrodynamics, and buoyancy characteristics of the wrack. Cobble beaches retained ;10 times and 30 times more wrack than did gravel and sand beaches, respectively. Cobble and gravel beaches also differed in species composition of new (fresh) wrack input, with Ma- crocystis integrifolia being characteristic for the former and Nereocystis luetkeana for the latter, which we attribute to buoyancy characteristics of the floating debris. On sand beaches, Phyllospadix spp. and Enteromorpha spp. were the dominant wrack species. Species com- position of freshly deposited wrack also depended on wave exposure, but predictability based on the species pool within a beach's catchment was restricted. Drift lines of aging wrack differed from freshly deposited wrack in species composition, probably due to wrack decomposition that results in fluxes of nutrients and energy between the adjacent marine and terrestrial habitats. We hold that the characteristics of a given beach, e.g., substratum and wave exposure, and their effects on wrack input, will have important ecological and biogeochemical implications for the marine-terrestrial ecotone.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The fact that DOC from freshwater sources provides protection against Cu toxicity in seawater suggests that extrapolation from freshwater toxicity testing may be possible for saltwater criteria development, including development of a saltwater Biotic Ligand Model for prediction of Cu toxicity.
Abstract: Marine water quality criteria for metals are largely driven by the extremely sensitive embryo-larval toxicity of Mytilus sp. Here we assess the toxicity of four dissolved metals (Cu, Zn, Ni, Cd) in the mussel Mytilus trossolus, at various salinity levels while also examining the modifying effects of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) on metal toxicity. In 48 h embryo development tests in natural seawater, measured EC50 values were 6.9-9.6 microg L(-1) (95% C.I.=5.5-10.8 microg L(-1)) for Cu, 99 microg L(-1) (86-101) for Zn, 150 microg L(-1) (73-156) for Ni, and 502 microg L(-1) (364-847) for Cd. A salinity threshold of >20 ppt (approximately 60% full strength seawater) was required for normal control development. Salinity in the 60-100% range did not alter Cu toxicity. Experimental addition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from three sources reduced Cu toxicity; for example the EC50 of embryos developing in seawater with 20 mg C L(-1) was 39 microg Cu L(-1) (35.2-47.2) a 4-fold increase in Cu EC50. The protective effects of DOC were influenced by their distinct physicochemical properties. Protection appears to be related to higher fulvic acid and lower humic acid content as operationally defined by fluorescence spectroscopy. The fact that DOC from freshwater sources provides protection against Cu toxicity in seawater suggests that extrapolation from freshwater toxicity testing may be possible for saltwater criteria development, including development of a saltwater Biotic Ligand Model for prediction of Cu toxicity.

142 citations


Authors

Showing all 216 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Chris M. Wood10279543076
Steve F. Perry6629413842
Martin Grosell6226611234
Patrick J. Walsh5624010448
Greg G. Goss532006938
Kathleen M. Gilmour451625909
John M. Gosline44857714
Jeffrey G. Richards431125893
Jonathan B. Shurin439918455
Adalto Bianchini432076300
Trevor J. Shuttleworth421135393
Mary L. Berbee41826794
Sigal Balshine411655546
Amanda E. Bates401087102
Raymond P. Henry38883944
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Australian Institute of Marine Science
3.5K papers, 221.2K citations

83% related

Fisheries and Oceans Canada
6.2K papers, 223K citations

82% related

Marine Biological Laboratory
8.4K papers, 524.4K citations

82% related

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
3.5K papers, 202.4K citations

82% related

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
5.9K papers, 363.9K citations

82% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20221
202111
20209
201913
201814