W. R. Miller, H. Heatwole, R. Pidgeon, G. Gardiner
{"title":"澳大利亚南极领地的缓步动物:南极洲东部的拉尔森山","authors":"W. R. Miller, H. Heatwole, R. Pidgeon, G. Gardiner","doi":"10.2307/3226642","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A survey of the terrestrial tardigrades inhabiting algae, lichens, and mosses in the Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica was conducted at 61 sites during the austral summer of 1987. Five genera and six species of Tardigrada were recovered. Statistical analysis of biotic association was conducted and for most species-pairs, tardigrades occur randomly with respect to each other. The hypothesis is proposed that distribution of tardigrades in the Antarctic is more strongly influenced by dispersal capabilities than by climatic factors or biotic interactions. East Antarctica is a series of widely dispersed, small, ice-free areas surrounded by a continuous sea of mostly frozen water. These islands, scattered along the Antarctic circle, provide a discontinuous habitat for terrestrial organisms. Tardigrade research in East Antarctica has been conducted entirely within the current century. Richters (1904, 1907) described the first tardigrades from this area, and later he listed 13 species, providing also the first discussion of distribution. Over 50 years passed before Morikawa (1962) and Sudzuki (1964) reported finding tardigrades near the Japanese base at Syowa, Queen Maud Land. Korotkevich (1964) found, but did not identify, tardigrades in bodies of freshwater in the Bungar Hills and the Obruchev Hills of Wilkes Land. Thomas (1965) found an unidentified Macrobiotus in the meltwater pools near the abandoned Wilkes Base on the Clark Peninsula. Another decade passed without reports of tardigrades from East Antarctica, until Sudzuki (1979) again described the animals from the Syowa area. In the early 1980's, the ecology of Antarctic tardigrades was discussed by Everitt (1981) and Miller (1983). Dastych (1984) expanded the list of species known from Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic islands and described eight species new to science. Gardiner & Pidgeon (1987) reported collections at sites in East Antarctica; this paper is the culmination of that work. The tardigrade fauna of the Vestfold We are grateful to the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions (ANARE) and to the personnel of the Australian Antarctic Division, especially Martin Betts, for logistical support and advice, and for making the expedition possible, and to Dr. Rod Seppelt for identification of the mosses and lichens. Publication costs, in part, are being met by a grant from the Spencer-Tolles Fund of the American Microscopical Society. TRANS. AM. MICROSC. SOC., 113(2): 142-160. 1994. ? Copyright, 1994, by the American Microscopical Society, Inc. This content downloaded from 157.55.39.251 on Thu, 14 Jul 2016 06:20:29 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms VOL. 113, NO. 2, APRIL 1994 Hills near Davis Base was surveyed by Miller et al. (1988); they discussed the ecology, distribution, and association patterns. Dastych (1989) reported on specimens collected in the area of Casey Station. Ryan et al. (1989) extended the known distribution of five species with a report from Robertskollen near the South African base of Sanae. Dastych et al. (1990) described two new species from the same area of Robertskollen. Dastych (1991) redescribed the species Hypsibius antarcticus, reducing confusion between this very common species and Hypsibius arcticus. Tardigrade research at locations other than East Antarctica was reviewed by Miller et al. (1988). Despite these efforts, many of the ice-free areas of East Antarctica remain unexplored and unsurveyed for tardigrades. The present report constitutes the first records of tardigrades from the Larsemann Hills on the Ingrid Christensen Coast of East Antarctica.","PeriodicalId":23957,"journal":{"name":"Transactions of the American Microscopical Society","volume":"31 1","pages":"142-160"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1994-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"22","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tardigrades of the Australian Antarctic Territories: the Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica\",\"authors\":\"W. R. Miller, H. Heatwole, R. Pidgeon, G. Gardiner\",\"doi\":\"10.2307/3226642\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"A survey of the terrestrial tardigrades inhabiting algae, lichens, and mosses in the Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica was conducted at 61 sites during the austral summer of 1987. Five genera and six species of Tardigrada were recovered. Statistical analysis of biotic association was conducted and for most species-pairs, tardigrades occur randomly with respect to each other. The hypothesis is proposed that distribution of tardigrades in the Antarctic is more strongly influenced by dispersal capabilities than by climatic factors or biotic interactions. East Antarctica is a series of widely dispersed, small, ice-free areas surrounded by a continuous sea of mostly frozen water. These islands, scattered along the Antarctic circle, provide a discontinuous habitat for terrestrial organisms. Tardigrade research in East Antarctica has been conducted entirely within the current century. Richters (1904, 1907) described the first tardigrades from this area, and later he listed 13 species, providing also the first discussion of distribution. Over 50 years passed before Morikawa (1962) and Sudzuki (1964) reported finding tardigrades near the Japanese base at Syowa, Queen Maud Land. Korotkevich (1964) found, but did not identify, tardigrades in bodies of freshwater in the Bungar Hills and the Obruchev Hills of Wilkes Land. Thomas (1965) found an unidentified Macrobiotus in the meltwater pools near the abandoned Wilkes Base on the Clark Peninsula. Another decade passed without reports of tardigrades from East Antarctica, until Sudzuki (1979) again described the animals from the Syowa area. In the early 1980's, the ecology of Antarctic tardigrades was discussed by Everitt (1981) and Miller (1983). Dastych (1984) expanded the list of species known from Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic islands and described eight species new to science. Gardiner & Pidgeon (1987) reported collections at sites in East Antarctica; this paper is the culmination of that work. The tardigrade fauna of the Vestfold We are grateful to the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions (ANARE) and to the personnel of the Australian Antarctic Division, especially Martin Betts, for logistical support and advice, and for making the expedition possible, and to Dr. Rod Seppelt for identification of the mosses and lichens. Publication costs, in part, are being met by a grant from the Spencer-Tolles Fund of the American Microscopical Society. TRANS. AM. MICROSC. SOC., 113(2): 142-160. 1994. ? Copyright, 1994, by the American Microscopical Society, Inc. This content downloaded from 157.55.39.251 on Thu, 14 Jul 2016 06:20:29 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms VOL. 113, NO. 2, APRIL 1994 Hills near Davis Base was surveyed by Miller et al. (1988); they discussed the ecology, distribution, and association patterns. Dastych (1989) reported on specimens collected in the area of Casey Station. Ryan et al. (1989) extended the known distribution of five species with a report from Robertskollen near the South African base of Sanae. Dastych et al. (1990) described two new species from the same area of Robertskollen. Dastych (1991) redescribed the species Hypsibius antarcticus, reducing confusion between this very common species and Hypsibius arcticus. Tardigrade research at locations other than East Antarctica was reviewed by Miller et al. (1988). Despite these efforts, many of the ice-free areas of East Antarctica remain unexplored and unsurveyed for tardigrades. 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引用次数: 22
摘要
1987年夏季,在南极东部的拉尔森山的61个地点对栖息在藻类、地衣和苔藓中的陆生缓步动物进行了调查。发现缓步动物5属6种。生物关联的统计分析表明,在大多数物种对中,缓步动物是随机发生的。这一假说提出,缓步动物在南极的分布受扩散能力的影响比受气候因素或生物相互作用的影响更大。东南极洲是一系列广泛分布的、小的、无冰的区域,周围是一个连续的海洋,大部分是冰冻的水。这些岛屿散布在南极圈上,为陆生生物提供了不连续的栖息地。东南极洲的缓步动物研究完全是在本世纪内进行的。Richters(1904, 1907)描述了该地区的第一批缓步动物,后来他列出了13种缓步动物,也首次讨论了缓步动物的分布。50多年后,Morikawa(1962)和Sudzuki(1964)才报道在莫德皇后地的Syowa日本基地附近发现了水熊虫。Korotkevich(1964)在威尔克斯地的Bungar Hills和Obruchev Hills的淡水水体中发现了缓步动物,但没有识别出来。Thomas(1965)在克拉克半岛废弃的威尔克斯基地附近的融水池中发现了一只身份不明的巨生鳄。又过了十年,没有关于东南极洲缓步动物的报道,直到Sudzuki(1979)再次描述了来自Syowa地区的动物。80年代初,Everitt(1981)和Miller(1983)对南极缓步动物的生态学进行了讨论。Dastych(1984)扩大了南极和亚南极岛屿已知的物种名单,并描述了8种科学上的新物种。Gardiner & Pidgeon(1987)报告了在东南极洲的一些地点的收集;这篇论文是这项工作的成果。我们要感谢澳大利亚国家南极研究探险队(ANARE)和澳大利亚南极分部的工作人员,特别是马丁·贝茨(Martin Betts),感谢他们的后勤支持和建议,感谢他们使这次探险成为可能,感谢罗德·塞佩尔特(Rod Seppelt)博士鉴定了苔藓和地衣。出版费用的一部分由美国显微学会的斯宾塞-托尔斯基金资助。反式。点。MICROSC。SOC。环境科学学报,2013(2):142-160。1994. ? 版权所有,1994年,美国显微学会,Inc。此内容于2016年7月14日星期四06:20:29 UTC从157.55.39.251下载。2.1994年4月Miller等人(1988)对Davis基地附近的丘陵进行了调查;他们讨论了生态、分布和关联模式。Dastych(1989)报告了在Casey站地区收集的标本。Ryan et al.(1989)在南非Sanae基地附近的Robertskollen发表了一份报告,扩展了已知的五种分布。Dastych et al.(1990)描述了来自Robertskollen同一地区的两个新种。Dastych(1991)重新描述了南极海扁虱这个物种,减少了这种非常常见的物种与北极海扁虱之间的混淆。Miller et al.(1988)回顾了在南极洲东部以外地区的缓步动物研究。尽管做出了这些努力,东南极洲的许多无冰地区仍未被探索,也没有对水熊虫进行调查。本报告首次记录了东南极洲英格丽·克里斯滕森海岸的拉尔森山的缓步动物。
Tardigrades of the Australian Antarctic Territories: the Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica
A survey of the terrestrial tardigrades inhabiting algae, lichens, and mosses in the Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica was conducted at 61 sites during the austral summer of 1987. Five genera and six species of Tardigrada were recovered. Statistical analysis of biotic association was conducted and for most species-pairs, tardigrades occur randomly with respect to each other. The hypothesis is proposed that distribution of tardigrades in the Antarctic is more strongly influenced by dispersal capabilities than by climatic factors or biotic interactions. East Antarctica is a series of widely dispersed, small, ice-free areas surrounded by a continuous sea of mostly frozen water. These islands, scattered along the Antarctic circle, provide a discontinuous habitat for terrestrial organisms. Tardigrade research in East Antarctica has been conducted entirely within the current century. Richters (1904, 1907) described the first tardigrades from this area, and later he listed 13 species, providing also the first discussion of distribution. Over 50 years passed before Morikawa (1962) and Sudzuki (1964) reported finding tardigrades near the Japanese base at Syowa, Queen Maud Land. Korotkevich (1964) found, but did not identify, tardigrades in bodies of freshwater in the Bungar Hills and the Obruchev Hills of Wilkes Land. Thomas (1965) found an unidentified Macrobiotus in the meltwater pools near the abandoned Wilkes Base on the Clark Peninsula. Another decade passed without reports of tardigrades from East Antarctica, until Sudzuki (1979) again described the animals from the Syowa area. In the early 1980's, the ecology of Antarctic tardigrades was discussed by Everitt (1981) and Miller (1983). Dastych (1984) expanded the list of species known from Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic islands and described eight species new to science. Gardiner & Pidgeon (1987) reported collections at sites in East Antarctica; this paper is the culmination of that work. The tardigrade fauna of the Vestfold We are grateful to the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions (ANARE) and to the personnel of the Australian Antarctic Division, especially Martin Betts, for logistical support and advice, and for making the expedition possible, and to Dr. Rod Seppelt for identification of the mosses and lichens. Publication costs, in part, are being met by a grant from the Spencer-Tolles Fund of the American Microscopical Society. TRANS. AM. MICROSC. SOC., 113(2): 142-160. 1994. ? Copyright, 1994, by the American Microscopical Society, Inc. This content downloaded from 157.55.39.251 on Thu, 14 Jul 2016 06:20:29 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms VOL. 113, NO. 2, APRIL 1994 Hills near Davis Base was surveyed by Miller et al. (1988); they discussed the ecology, distribution, and association patterns. Dastych (1989) reported on specimens collected in the area of Casey Station. Ryan et al. (1989) extended the known distribution of five species with a report from Robertskollen near the South African base of Sanae. Dastych et al. (1990) described two new species from the same area of Robertskollen. Dastych (1991) redescribed the species Hypsibius antarcticus, reducing confusion between this very common species and Hypsibius arcticus. Tardigrade research at locations other than East Antarctica was reviewed by Miller et al. (1988). Despite these efforts, many of the ice-free areas of East Antarctica remain unexplored and unsurveyed for tardigrades. The present report constitutes the first records of tardigrades from the Larsemann Hills on the Ingrid Christensen Coast of East Antarctica.