48 results on '"Potapova, Marina"'
Search Results
2. Microbial Eukaryotes in Natural and Artificial Salt Marsh Pools.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina, Markarian, Daiana, King, Abigail, and Aycock, Laura
- Subjects
EUKARYOTES ,SALT marsh ecology ,COASTAL wetlands ,COASTAL ecology ,DINOFLAGELLATES ,FORAMINIFERA - Abstract
Microscopic eukaryotes are important components of coastal wetland ecosystems. The goal of this study was to investigate the diversity of microeukaryotes in the tidal pools of a New Jersey salt marsh and to compare the assemblages of natural and artificial pools excavated for controlling mosquito populations. We evaluated microeukaryotic assemblages using the amplicon sequencing of 18S and rbcL DNA markers and the microscopic identification of diatoms in water and sediment samples. 18S unique amplicon sequence variants (ASV) representing ciliates, dinoflagellates, diatoms, and cercozoans were the most diverse, while the reads of dinoflagellates, diatoms, ciliates, and nematodes were the most abundant. The dominant ASVs were attributed to organisms that are characteristic of coastal plankton and sediments or those known for their resistance to salinity, desiccation, hypoxia, and UV stress. The sediment assemblages were more diverse compared to those from the water column and contained a larger portion of ASVs that were not assigned to any low-rank taxa, reflecting the current gaps in understanding the diversity of microeukaryotes. Most taxonomic groups were significantly different in their abundance and composition between natural and artificial pools. Dinoflagellates, haptophytes, chrysophytes, pelagophytes, and raphidophytes—the groups that include a large proportion of mixotrophic taxa and species known for forming harmful algal blooms—were more abundant in the artificial than in the natural pools. Fungi, labyrinthulomycetes, and peronosporomycetes were also more abundant in artificial pools, which may be related to organic matter enrichment. Diatoms and foraminifera showed an opposite trend of higher abundance in natural pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Students' Adaptation in the Social and Cultural Dynamics
- Author
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Sadyrin, Vladimir Vitalievich, Potapova, Marina Vladimirovna, Gnatyshina, Elena Alexandrovna, Uvarina, Nataliya Viktorovna, and Danilova, Viktoriya Valerievna
- Abstract
Modern scientific literature views issues on adaptation based on various aspects: biological, medical, pedagogical, sociological, cybernetic, interdisciplinary, etc. The given article is devoted to the analysis of the problem of adaptation as social and psychological phenomenon including peculiarities of its functioning in the conditions of social and cultural acceleration (dynamics). The analysis of empirical data on the results of research of adaptation processes of students of the chosen higher educational institution has been given here combined with comparative analysis of adaptability of foreign and local students of the first year of academic study.
- Published
- 2016
4. The Potential and Limitations of Diatoms as Environmental Indicators in Mid-Atlantic Coastal Wetlands
- Author
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Desianti, Nina, Enache, Mihaela D., Griffiths, Michael, Biskup, Ksawery, Degen, Austin, DaSilva, Michael, Millemann, Daniel, Lippincott, Lee, Watson, Elizabeth, Gray, Andrew, Nikitina, Daria, and Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2019
5. The novel species Navicula eileeniae (Bacillariophyta, Naviculaceae) and its recent expansion in the Central Appalachian region of North America
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G., Ciugulea, Ionel, and Minerovic, Alison
- Published
- 2019
6. Sediment Diatoms as Environmental Indicators in New Jersey Coastal Lagoons
- Author
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Desianti, Nina, Potapova, Marina, Enache, Mihaela, Belton, Thomas J., Velinsky, David J., Thomas, Roger, and Mead, Jerry
- Published
- 2017
7. Variance partitioning of stream diatom, fish, and invertebrate indicators of biological condition
- Author
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Zuellig, Robert E., Carlisle, Daren M., Meador, Michael R., and Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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8. Biological assessments of Appalachian streams based on predictive models for fish, macroinvertebrate, and diatom assemblages
- Author
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Carlisle, Daren M., Hawkins, Charles P., Meador, Michael R., Potapova, Marina, and Falcone, James
- Published
- 2008
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9. Choice of substrate in algae-based water-quality assessment
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Potapova, Marina and Charles, Donald F.
- Published
- 2005
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10. Environmental DNA genetic monitoring of the nuisance freshwater diatom, Didymosphenia geminata, in eastern North American streams
- Author
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Keller, Stephen R., Hilderbrand, Robert H., Shank, Matthew K., and Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2017
11. Benthic Diatoms in USA Rivers: Distributions along Spatial and Environmental Gradients
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G. and Charles, Donald F.
- Published
- 2002
12. Rational Use of Whey in Food Production †.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina, Ivanova, Sofia, Lyakhovchenko, Nikita, Radchenko, Alexandra, Shaidorova, Galina, and Kuzubova, Elena
- Subjects
DAIRY products ,FOOD industry ,BIOTECHNOLOGY research ,WHEY products ,FOOD waste - Abstract
This study describes the biotechnological significance of the by-product obtained in the production of milk products in the food industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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13. Evaluation of the Safety of Immobilized Microorganisms Lysobacter sp. on Inorganic Media †.
- Author
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Shaidorova, Galina, Vesentsev, Alexander, Krut, Ulyana, Kuzubova, Elena, Radchenko, Alexandra, and Potapova, Marina
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BACTERIAL cells ,ENCAPSULATION (Catalysis) ,CARBOXYMETHYLCELLULOSE ,MONTMORILLONITE ,SILICA ,CELL preservation - Abstract
It is known that the immobilization of microorganisms on carriers of various natures increases their safety. The inorganic matrices used were sodium carboxymethyl cellulose, technical brand "KMC 85/500;" colloidal silicon dioxide in the form of a commercial preparation, "Polysorb;" and the sodium form of montmorillonite from the Podgorenskoye deposit in the Voronezh region. Bacterial cells were immobilized by adding Lysobacter sp. solid sterile carrier with constant mechanical stirring in a "carrier/biomass" ratio equal to 1: (2–4). During the experiment, it was found that the mineral montmorillonite is a promising material for the immobilization of bacterial cells in order to obtain biocompositions based on them, since a positive trend in the preservation of bacterial cells was revealed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Biotesting of Soil Contamination of Agricultural Land Prokhorovsky District of the Belgorod Region †.
- Author
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Kuzubova, Elena, Grigorenko, Natalya, Shaidorova, Galina, Ogneva, Zlata, and Potapova, Marina
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SOIL pollution ,LIVESTOCK farms ,BIOINDICATORS ,LEPIDIUM ,DAPHNIA magna - Abstract
Belgorod Region is one of the main agro-industrial regions of Russia. The volume of production in the livestock sector in 2022 amounted to 203 billion rubles. Most often, livestock farms are located near agricultural land with plant crops, which increases the risk of contamination of the latter with various toxicants. The purpose of this work was to study and assess the contamination with heavy metal ions and toxic chemicals of the soils of agricultural lands and nearby reservoirs in the Prokhorovsky district of the Belgorod region. Watercress (Lepidium sativum) and crustaceans (Daphnia magna Straus) are bioindicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The use of Soxhlet extractor for the production of tinctures from plant raw materials
- Author
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Borodulin Dmitrii, Prosin Maksim, Bakin Igor, Lobasenko Boris, Potapova Marina, and Shalev Aleksei
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The most important stage in the production of tinctures and aromatic alcohols is the extraction process. The paper aims to study the process of extracting target compounds from fruit and berry raw materials for the production of alcoholic tinctures. The research was carried out using a Soxhlet extractor. The experimental results were processed using the method of multiple regression analysis. As a result of processing the experimental data, the optimal technological regime parameters for the production of aromatic cranberry alcoholic tincture were selected. The cranberry tinctures produced at these parameters have a high content of target substances and reach maximum scores for taste, aroma and color. The obtained regression equations allow predetermining the quality of the resulting drink with a confidentiality of more than 90%. The use of the Soxhlet extractor allowed reducing the duration of the preparation of the cranberry tincture to 15 minutes, which is by times different from the classic method of tincture production. The use of the Soxhlet extractor allows reducing the consumed amount of solvent and raw materials, due to the almost maximum rate of the extraction. All this, in turn, affects the cost of the final product and the costs of the manufacturer.
- Published
- 2020
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16. Diversity and distribution of spine-bearing species of Pinnularia in eastern North America.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G., Kersey, Micaela H., and Aycock, Laura L.
- Subjects
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SPECIES distribution , *DRILL core analysis , *LAKE sediments , *SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
Six species of large-celled Pinnularia Ehrenberg from lakes of eastern North America, P. dariana (A.W.F. Schmidt) Mills, P. alabamae Krammer, P. bihastata (A. Mann) R.M. Patrick, P. torta (A. Mann) R.M. Patrick, P. rexlowei sp. nov. and P. spinifera sp. nov. are investigated with light and scanning electron microscopy. All six species are shown to possess marginal spines, a trait sporadically encountered in Pinnularia and generally rare in raphid diatoms. Besides having spines, the six species differ in their frustular morphology, including appearance and position of spines. We summarize data on their ecology and distribution using a set of 702 sediment core samples from 424 lakes from eastern USA and Canada. Pinnularia rexlowei is only known from Quaternary lacustrine deposits in the State of Connecticut and from the surface and subfossil sediments of two lakes in northeastern USA. The other five species are relatively common, and at least one species of spine-bearing Pinnularia was found in 34% of studied lakes. Pinnularia dariana and P. torta reach as far north as Labrador, while P. alabamae, P. bihastata and P. spinifera were only encountered south of Canada. Pinnularia alabamae and P. spinifera are characteristic for lakes with relatively soft and slightly acidic water, while P. bihastata, P. dariana and P. torta are found in a wider range of physico-chemical conditions, including alkaline and eutrophic lakes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Type material of the diatom Eunotia arcuoides Foged
- Author
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Beals, Jennifer and Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2013
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18. The types of 22 Navicula (Bacillariophyta) species described by Ruth Patrick
- Author
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Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2013
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19. Microfossils in resin from the middle Eocene Buchanan Lake Formation, Napartulik, Axel Heiberg Island, Nunavut, Canada.
- Author
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Halbwachs, Hans, Grímsson, Friðgeir, Potapova, Marina, Dolezych, Martina, and LePage, Ben
- Subjects
FOSSIL microorganisms ,EOCENE Epoch ,FORESTED wetlands ,FUNGAL spores ,CONIFEROUS forests ,POLLEN ,PINACEAE - Abstract
During the warm middle Eocene (ca 45 Ma), the Napartulik area (also called 'the Geodetic Hills'), Axel Heiberg Island, northern Canada (Nunavut), was vegetated with mixed broad-leaved deciduous angiosperm and evergreen conifer forests over extensive floodplain and forested wetland habitats. Massive organic rich sedimentary successions and encapsulated in-situ tree trunks suggest these forests were drowned by frequent flooding events. The sedimentary layers contain sub-fossil amber that was produced by representatives of the Pinaceae such as Pseudolarix. The amber offered an opportunity to investigate aerial plankton and thus the chance to discover microfossils, which could provide evidence of biotic interactions associated with, or the cause of, the forest die-offs. Fifty-four amber samples were subjected to a solvent treatment for microfossil extraction followed by light microscopy, resulting in the discovery of several hundred microfossils. Unexpectedly, one-quarter of the microfossils were diatoms, which may predominantly have lived on the tree bark. Fungal spores were rare, and the pollen grains found corroborated earlier findings in litter or coal. The records of fungal spores and arthropod remains were insignificant and could, therefore, not substantially have been contributing to the forest die-offs. More resin analyses from the complete sedimentary profile would be needed to get a clearer picture of putative forest pests and prevailing environmental conditions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Tabellaria vetteri, a new diatom (Bacillariophyceae: Tabellariaceae) from Pennsylvania, USA
- Author
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Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2011
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21. The ANSP Diatom Herbarium: an important resource for diatom research
- Author
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Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2010
22. Aulacoseira pardata sp. nov., A. nivalis comb. nov., A. nivaloides comb. etg stat. nov., and Their Occurrences in Western North America
- Author
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English, Jonathan and Potapova, Marina
- Published
- 2009
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23. NEW SPECIES AND COMBINATIONS IN THE DIATOM GENUS SELLAPHORA (SELLAPHORACEAE) FROM SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G. and Ponader, Karin C.
- Published
- 2008
24. Aulacoseira newjerseyana sp. nov. (Bacillariophyta) a new freshwater centric diatom species from the northeastern USA.
- Author
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Enache, Mihaela D., Potapova, Marina G., Tyree Polaskey, Meredith, and Spaulding, Sarah A.
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *FRESH water , *LAKE sediments , *SPECIES - Abstract
A new species of Aulacoseira Thwaites is described from sediment deposits of Surprise Lake, an isolated lake located in the New Jersey Highlands. The species is characterized by (1) a low mantle, (2) unevenly distributed mantle areolae of variable size and shape, and (3) a valve face covered by rounded areolae. The new species is most similar to Aulacoseira biseriata (Grunow in Van Heurk) Houk, R. Klee & H. Tanaka. Both taxa possess frustules with mantles that are low, with irregular pervalvar rows or scattered areolae. However, the two species differ in the shape and pattern of the areolae, the shape and structure of the mantle wall, the shape and depth of the ringleist, and other morphological features. In this study, we present light and scanning electron microscopic images of the new species and compare it to the most similar taxa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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25. Stauroneis terryi D.B. Ward ex T.C. Palmer: a forgotten diatom from northeastern North America.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina, Gallen, Caroline, and Friedman, Naomi
- Subjects
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DIATOMS , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Stauroneis terryi D.B. Ward ex T.C. Palmer is a diatom so far reported from only five locations in the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine, USA, where it was collected in 1890—1911. There were no records of this large and rather conspicuous species in any collections made after 1911 despite the considerable number of diatom surveys and paleolimnological studies conducted in the northeastern USA. We studied material from the type locality of this species to document its morphology with SEM, and screened diatom slides representing recent and subfossil samples collected from 169 lakes in northeastern North America from 1979 to 2017 for the presence of this species. Using both whole-slide scanning and traditional microscopy, we detected S. terryi in 15 lakes in the northeastern USA north of 41° N latitude and in five lakes of Labrador and adjacent Quebec, Canada. In the USA, S. terryi populations have declined since pre-industrial times, although the species is still present in a few lakes with relatively undisturbed watersheds. Our observations demonstrate the value of museum collections for generating data on diatom ecology and biogeography and the need for the development of high-throughput methods of extracting information from diatom slides and images. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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26. Quantifying species indicator values for trophic diatom indices: a comparison of approaches
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G., Charles, Donald F., Ponader, Karin C., and Winter, Diane M.
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- 2004
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27. Diatoms.org: supporting taxonomists, connecting communities.
- Author
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Spaulding, Sarah A., Potapova, Marina G., Bishop, Ian W., Lee, Sylvia S., Gasperak, Tim S., Jovanoska, Elena, Furey, Paula C., and Edlund, Mark B.
- Subjects
- *
TAXONOMISTS , *AQUATIC biodiversity , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators , *ELECTRONIC books , *LITERARY sources , *VIRTUAL communities , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Consistent identification of diatoms is a prerequisite for studying their ecology, biogeography, and successful application as environmental indicators. However, taxonomic consistency among observers has been difficult to achieve because taxonomic information is scattered across numerous literature sources, presenting challenges to the diatomist. Firstly, literature is often inaccessible because of cost or its location in journals that are not widely circulated. Secondly, taxonomic revisions of diatoms are taking place faster than floras can be updated. Finally, taxonomic information is often contradictory across literature sources. These issues can be addressed by developing a content creation community dedicated to making taxonomic, ecological, and image-based data freely available for diatom researchers. Diatoms.org represents such a content curation community, providing open, online access to a vast amount of recent and historical information on North American diatom taxonomy and ecology. The content curation community aggregates existing taxonomic information, creates new content, and provides feedback in the form of corrections and notices of literature with nomenclatural changes. The website not only addresses the needs of experienced diatom scientists for consistent identification but is also designed to meet users at their level of expertise, including engaging the lay public in the importance of diatom science. The website now contains over 1000 species pages contributed by over 100 content contributors, from students to established scientists. The project began with the intent to provide accurate information on diatom identification, ecology, and distribution using an approach that incorporates engaging design, user feedback, and advanced data access technology. In retrospect, the project that began as an 'extended electronic book' has emerged not only as a means to support taxonomists, but for practitioners to communicate and collaborate, expanding the size of and benefits to the content curation community. In this paper, we outline the development of diatoms.org, document key elements of the project, examine ongoing challenges and consider the unexpected emergent properties, including the value of diatoms.org as a source of data. Ultimately, if the field of diatom taxonomy, ecology, and biodiversity is to be relevant, a new generation of taxonomists needs to be trained and employed using new tools. We propose that diatoms.org is in a key position to serve as a hub of training and continuity for the study of diatom biodiversity and aquatic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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28. Discostella lacuskarluki (Manguin ex Kociolek & Reviers) comb. nov.: a common nanoplanktonic diatom of Arctic and boreal lakes.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G., Aycock, Laura, and Bogan, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *LAKES , *SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
Cyclotella lacuskarluki Manguin ex Kociolek & Reviers is a small diatom known only from the original drawing that provides little information on the morphology of this taxon. As Manguin's original materials are lost, recently collected samples from Lake Karluk, Alaska, the type locality of the species, were studied with light and scanning electron microscopy to determine its identity. As a result of this investigation, C. lacuskarluki is transferred here to the genus Discostella. Discostella lacuskarluki is 2.5–7 µm in diameter, has a shallow mantle, a stellar pattern of alveoli in the valve centre that may be reduced or completely absent, bifurcating costae and 4–5 marginal fultoportulae opening externally by short thickened tubes with round openings. We observed this species in numerous lakes across Alaska, in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, in several lakes across Canada, and in tundra and tree-line lakes of Northeastern Siberia. Although direct comparison with other Discostella species is difficult because the small size of these diatoms requires high-resolution imagery to reveal ultrastructural details, it appears that D. lacuskarluki is conspecific with D. tatrica Procházková et al. recently described from lakes of Central Europe and also reported from the European part of Russia. It is also conspecific with D. nipponica (Skvotzov) Tuji & D. M. Williams known from Japan. The apparent wide distributional range of this species indicates that it has been overlooked and commonly reported as D. pseudostelligera or D. stelligera in arctic, boreal and alpine lakes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Occurrence of two Krsticiella species in Beringia suggests this genus is a Cenozoic relict.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G.
- Subjects
- *
WATERSHEDS , *SPECIES , *PLIOCENE Epoch , *SPECIES distribution , *TUNDRAS , *NAVICULA , *DIATOMS - Abstract
The genus Krsticiella Levkov was previously known only from the basins of Lakes Ohrid and Prespa, and from Lake Baikal. Examination of type materials of diatoms originally described by Niels Foged from the North Slope of Alaska revealed that Navicula lenis Foged and N. meadeensis Foged belong to Krsticiella, to which they are formally transferred here. One of these species, K. lenis, is also found in thermokarst tundra lakes of the Kolyma Lowland in Northeastern Siberia. Several illustrations in previously published floras of Pliocene and Pleistocene diatoms of Eurasia indicate wider past distributions of Krsticiella species. The current restriction of this genus to non-glaciated regions of the Arctic and large ancient lakes in temperate zone indicates that it is a Cenozoic relict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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30. New and Rare Psammothidium Species (Bacillariophyta, Achnanthidiaceae) from Northeastern Siberia.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina G.
- Abstract
Three rare Psammothidium species were found in recently surveyed lakes of Northeastern Siberia, Russia. One of these species found in lakes of the Kolyma Lowland, is new for science and is formally described here as Psammothidium onufrii sp. nov. It is morphologically similar to the brackish–water species Achnanthes punctulata, but it lacks a central area on rapheless valve and possesses a large central area on the raphe valve. Psammothidium onufrii is characteristic for tundra thermokarst lakes with moderate mineral content. Psammothidium sacculum previously reported from a few subarctic and arctic locations was found in several lakes of the Kolyma Lowland and of the Magadan District. The frustule ultrastructure of this species is documented for the first time here. The third species, known as Achnanthes obliqua (W. Gregory) Hustedt and transferred here to Psammothidium, is a morphologically distinct and relatively rare diatom occasionally reported from northern regions of Eurasia and Western North America. In Northeastern Siberia it was found in sediments of relatively large shallow lakes with low to moderate mineral content. Detailed morphological characterization of the three Psammothidium species will facilitate their detection in environmental surveys and their use in paleoenvironmental reconstructions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The distribution and utility of sea-level indicators in Eurasian sub-Arctic salt marshes (White Sea, Russia).
- Author
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Kemp, Andrew C., Horton, Benjamin P., Nikitina, Daria, Vane, Christopher H., Potapova, Marina, Weber‐Bruya, Elizabeth, Culver, Stephen J., Repkina, Tatyana, and Hill, David F.
- Subjects
SEA level ,BIOINDICATORS ,SALT marshes ,FORAMINIFERA ,SEDIMENTS ,GEOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
In support of efforts to reconstruct relative sea level ( RSL), we investigated the utility of foraminifera, diatoms and bulk-sediment geochemistry (δ
13 C, C:N and parameters measured by Rock-Eval pyrolysis) as sea-level indicators in Eurasian sub-Arctic salt marshes. At three salt marshes (<15 km apart) in Dvina Bay (White Sea, Russia), we collected surface sediment samples along transects from subtidal to Taiga forest environments. Foraminifera at all sites formed bipartite assemblages, where elevations below mean high higher water ( MHHW) were dominated by Miliammina spp. and elevations between MHHW and the highest occurrence of foraminifera were dominated by Jadammina macrescens and Balticammina pseudomacrescens. Five high-diversity groups of diatoms were identified and they displayed pronounced variability amongst the study sites. Bulk-sediment geochemistry recognized two groups (clastic-dominated environments below MHHW and organic-rich environments above MHHW). As one group included subtidal elevations and the other included supratidal elevations, we conclude that the measured geochemical parameters are not stand-alone sea-level indicators. Core JT2012 captured a regressive sediment succession of clastic, tidal-flat sediment overlain by salt-marsh organic silt and freshwater peat. The salt-marsh sediment accumulated at 2804±52 years before present and preserved foraminifera ( Jadammina macrescens and Balticammina pseudomacrescens) with good analogy to modern assemblages indicating that RSL was +2.60±0.47 m at this time. Diatoms confirm that marine influence decreased through time, but the lack of analogy between modern and core assemblages limited their utility as sea-level indicators. Geochemical parameters also indicate a reduction in marine influence through time. We conclude that RSL reconstructions derived from salt-marsh sediment preserved beneath Eurasian sub-Arctic peatlands can provide valuable insight into the spatio-temporal evolution of the Fennoscandian and Eurasian ice sheets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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32. Gomphonema caperatum sp. nov., G. obstipum sp. nov. and similar taxa from rivers of North America.
- Author
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Ponader, Karin C., Potapova, Marina G., Desianti, Nina, Hamilton, Paul B., Lavoie, Isabelle, and Campeau, Stéphane
- Subjects
- *
GOMPHONEMA , *MORPHOLOGY , *TAXONOMY , *NATURAL history - Abstract
Two new species ofGomphonemawith linear-lanceolate valves, narrow cells (width ≤6 µm), wide axial areas, short uniseriate striae, and one stigmoid per valve are described.Gomphonema caperatumsp. nov. has narrow, almost linear valves with short marginal striae, apically elongated slit-like areolae, and transapically oriented linear markings on the external valve surface, which are only observable under scanning electron microscopy. This is a common and often abundant species in rivers across Eastern North America, especially in the Appalachian region, but is also found on the West Coast.Gomphonema obstipumsp. nov. has lanceolate valves with bent apices, variously shaped apically elongated areolae, and shallow circular depressions on the external valve surface. This species has only been found in two Virginian rivers. We compare the new taxa with several species ofGomphonemafrom North American rivers that are morphologically similar, such asGomphonema amerhombicumReichardt,Gomphonema stoermeriKociolek & Kingston, and other species with linear-lanceolate valves and wide axial areas. In addition, we report here for the first time the occurrence ofGomphonema incognitumin North America. This study underscores the insufficiency of our knowledge of diatom diversity in North America and the need for more detailed taxonomic investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Potential effects of sediment contaminants on diatom assemblages in coastal lagoons of New Jersey and New York States.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina, Desianti, Nina, and Enache, Mihaela
- Subjects
SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,ORGANIC water pollutants ,DIATOMS ,LAGOONS ,ESTUARIES - Abstract
Sediment samples from the coastal lagoons and estuaries of New York and New Jersey were used to investigate the influence of contaminants on diatom assemblages. Multivariate analyses demonstrated correspondence between composition of diatom assemblages and concentrations of several metals and total PAH. The effects of the individual contaminants were difficult to disentangle because of the considerable correlations between their concentrations. The most conspicuous trend was the increase in the relative abundance of small centric planktonic diatoms in response to contamination and the corresponding decrease in the benthic flora. The high relative abundance of planktonic species on contaminated sediments apparently resulted not so much from their tolerance to pollution, but from the paucity of benthic species. A comparison of the assemblages on the surface and at the depth of approximately 8–10 cm revealed a statistically significant temporal change in community composition towards planktonic diatoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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34. Sherri Cooper (1956–2015).
- Author
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Potapova, Marina
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGISTS , *PALEOECOLOGY - Abstract
An obituary for paleoecologist Sherri Cooper is presented.
- Published
- 2016
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35. A new species of Sellaphora (Sellaphoraceae) from Hannaberry Lake, Arkansas, U.S.A.
- Author
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Enache, Mihaela D. and Potapova, Marina
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *PHYSICAL geography , *GEOLOGY , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
A new small-size species of Sellaphora was found in sediments from Hannaberry Lake, Arkansas, during the National Lakes Assessment project conducted by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. The species was studied with light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. It differs from previously reported Sellaphora species by its small and delicate frustule with striation irresolvable in light microscopy. Here we present details on its morphology and size variation and report the characteristics of the lake where the species was found. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
36. Diatoms from the genus Achnanthidium in flowing waters of the Appalachian Mountains (North America): Ecology, distribution and taxonomic notes.
- Author
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Ponader, Karin C. and Potapova, Marina G.
- Subjects
DIATOMS ,ACHNANTHES ,BIOLOGICAL classification ,RIVER ecology ,WATER chemistry ,ENVIRONMENTAL sampling ,MICROSCOPY - Abstract
Abstract: Diatoms from the genus Achnanthidium are abundant in rivers, streams, and springs of the Appalachian Mountains. They inhabit clean and polluted waters, including those affected by acid mine drainage. The identification of Achnanthidium taxa is difficult due to their small cell size and insufficient information in the diatom floras. We studied the taxonomy and ecology of Achnanthidium in Appalachian rivers by analyzing a data set of benthic diatom samples and corresponding water chemistry data collected during several water-quality surveys from 181 sampling sites. Ten species were identified using scanning electron and light microscopy: A. alpestre (Lowe & Kociolek) Lowe & Kociolek, A. atomus (Hustedt) Monnier, Lange-Bertalot, & Ector, A. deflexum (Reimer) Kingston, A. duthii (Sreenivasa) Edlund, A. eutrophilum (Lange-Bertalot) Lange-Bertalot, A. cf. gracillimum (Meister) Lange-Bertalot, A. cf. latecephalum Kobayasi, A. minutissimum (Kützing) Czarnecki (sensu lato), A. reimeri (Camburn) comb. nov., and A. rivulare Potapova & Ponader. The distribution of common taxa in relation to water chemistry was studied by fitting non-parametric regression models (generalized additive models, GAM, and non-parametric multiplicative regression models, NPMR) to species relative abundances. Studied Achnanthidium species differed considerably in their responses to water chemistry. These results suggest that species-level identifications will lead to more accurate bioassessments. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Morphological and ecological variation within the Achnanthidium minutissimum (Bacillariophyceae) species complex1.
- Author
-
Potapova, Marina and Hamilton, Paul B.
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *PHYTOPLANKTON , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *WATER quality - Abstract
Variation of frustular morphology within the Achnanthidium minutissimum (Kütz.) Czarn. species complex was studied in type populations of 12 described taxa and in 30 recent North American river samples. The SEM observations in this study and other publications showed that ultrastructural characters on their own do not discriminate among taxa within the A. minutissimum complex. Therefore, an attempt was made to use other characters, such as valve shape and striation pattern, to delineate morphological groups. The sliding-landmarks method was used to obtain valve-shape descriptors. These shape variables were combined with conventional morphological characters in multivariate analyses. It was shown that some historically recognized taxa are morphologically distinct, while others are difficult to differentiate. Morphological grouping of “old” taxa most similar to A. minutissimum did not correspond to their taxonomic hierarchy in contemporary diatom floras. Morphometric analysis of a data set of 728 specimens from North American rivers revealed six morphological groups, although it was impossible to draw clear boundaries among them. These morphological groups differed significantly in their ecological characteristics and could be recommended as indicators of water quality. Application of the discriminant function analysis based on shape variables and striation pattern showed that North American specimens could be more consistently classified into the six groups identified in our analysis than into historically recognized taxa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Morphological and ecological variation within the Achnanthidium minutissimum (Bacillariophyceae) species complex1.
- Author
-
Potapova, Marina and Hamilton, Paul B.
- Subjects
DIATOMS ,PHYTOPLANKTON ,BIOLOGICAL classification ,WATER quality - Abstract
Variation of frustular morphology within the Achnanthidium minutissimum (Kütz.) Czarn. species complex was studied in type populations of 12 described taxa and in 30 recent North American river samples. The SEM observations in this study and other publications showed that ultrastructural characters on their own do not discriminate among taxa within the A. minutissimum complex. Therefore, an attempt was made to use other characters, such as valve shape and striation pattern, to delineate morphological groups. The sliding-landmarks method was used to obtain valve-shape descriptors. These shape variables were combined with conventional morphological characters in multivariate analyses. It was shown that some historically recognized taxa are morphologically distinct, while others are difficult to differentiate. Morphological grouping of “old” taxa most similar to A. minutissimum did not correspond to their taxonomic hierarchy in contemporary diatom floras. Morphometric analysis of a data set of 728 specimens from North American rivers revealed six morphological groups, although it was impossible to draw clear boundaries among them. These morphological groups differed significantly in their ecological characteristics and could be recommended as indicators of water quality. Application of the discriminant function analysis based on shape variables and striation pattern showed that North American specimens could be more consistently classified into the six groups identified in our analysis than into historically recognized taxa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Diatom metrics for monitoring eutrophication in rivers of the United States
- Author
-
Potapova, Marina and Charles, Donald F.
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *RIVERS , *GEOLOGICAL surveys - Abstract
Abstract: Two major arguments in favor of using diatoms in water-quality assessments are that their distributions are cosmopolitan and their ecology is well studied. If these assumptions are true, diatom-based monitoring tools could be considered universal and used in any geographic area. Indeed, some diatom metrics based on species indicator values developed in Europe are often used in North America and many other parts of the world. There is considerable evidence, however, that diatom metrics are less useful when applied in a geographic area other than where species relations with environmental characteristics were originally studied to construct the metrics. We used U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment program data to create diatom metrics for monitoring eutrophication, and show here that these metrics provide better assessments in U.S. rivers than similar metrics developed for European inland waters. We also demonstrate that metrics developed by studying diatom–nutrient relationships on the continental-scale can be further refined if combined with regional-scale studies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Family meals and disparities in global ecosystem dependency. Three examples: Ghana, Russia and Sweden.
- Author
-
Shanahan, Helena, Carlsson‐Kanyama, Annika, Offei‐Ansah, Christina, Ekström, Marianne P., and Potapova, Marina
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,FAMILIES ,FOOD habits ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Abstract This article highlights globalization in terms of dependency on local and global ecosystems when it comes to family diets. In an exploratory case study, one typical meal in three household settings in different parts of the world: Ghana, Russia and Sweden, is examined. Food paths are traced to compare the scale of ecosystem dependency. The result shows that ecosystem dependency varies greatly with implications for environmental impact. The Swedish household, as opposed to the Ghanaian and the Russian, is not dependent on local ecosystems for food provision, but increasingly on global systems. Opportunities and constraints for lowering environmental impacts related to diets in different economies are discussed. It is concluded that it is of great importance to create awareness in high-income countries of the dependency on the global ecosystem and the resulting environmental impacts. It is in these countries that opportunities are available for change towards more sustainable diets. It is suggested that further research need to explore in greater depth how ecosystem dependency differs and how that translates into broad spectra of environmental impacts, considering other dimensions of sustainable development as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Changes in food provision in Russian households experiencing perestroika.
- Author
-
Ekström, Karin M., Ekström, Marianne P., Potapova, Marina, and Shanahan, Helena
- Subjects
CONSUMER behavior ,FOOD consumption ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Abstract The purpose of this article is to describe how households in Novgorod the Great, Russia, deal with food provision in everyday life. The study focuses on changes experienced in food provision and consumption in Russian society, in order to illustrate how households respond to the transformation towards a market economy. The study reflects women's perspective on food provision. Students from Novgorod the Great visited 105 households and asked the women in the household to answer a questionnaire. Results from the study show that in order to cope with changes in society related to economic reforms, Russian households had changed both their food consumption and food production patterns. There was no big difference between urban and rural households. Nearly all of the households were self-sufficient in the provision of vegetables and potatoes. Many households had a ‘dacha’ (plot), where they produced most of what they needed. Among the changes experienced during recent years (i.e. during the end of the 1990s), a decade after perestroika was initiated, households mentioned the rise in food prices and the decrease of income. Households reported that they consumed less fruit and/or meat. Some households also mentioned that the quality of nourishment had decreased, thereby indicating lower general quality, lower nutrition value, or less healthy foodstuffs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Distribution of benthic diatoms in U.S. rivers in relation to conductivity and ionic composition.
- Author
-
Potapova, Marina and Charles, Donald F.
- Subjects
- *
WATER quality , *DIATOMS , *RIVERS - Abstract
Summary 1. We quantified the relationships between diatom relative abundance and water conductivity and ionic composition, using a dataset of 3239 benthic diatom samples collected from 1109 river sites throughout the U.S.A. [U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program dataset]. This dataset provided a unique opportunity to explore the autecology of freshwater diatoms over a broad range of environmental conditions. 2. Conductivity ranged from 10 to 14 500 μS cm-1 , but most of the rivers had moderate conductivity (interquartile range 180–618 μS cm-1 ). Calcium and bicarbonate were the dominant ions. Ionic composition, however, varied greatly because of the influence of natural and anthropogenic factors. 3. Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) and Monte Carlo permutation tests showed that conductivity and abundances of major ions (HCO&formmu0; + CO&formmu1;, Cl- , SO&formmu2;, Ca2+ , Mg2+ , Na+ , K+ ) all explained a statistically significant amount of the variation in assemblage composition of benthic diatoms. Concentrations of HCO&formmu3; + CO&formmu4; and Ca2+ were the most significant sources of environmental variance. 4. The CCA showed that the gradient of ionic composition explaining most variation in diatom assemblage structure ranged from waters dominated by Ca2+ and HCO&formmu5; + CO&formmu6; to waters with higher proportions of Na+ , K+ , and Cl- . The CCA also revealed that the distributions of some diatoms correlated strongly with proportions of individual cations and anions, and with the ratio of monovalent to divalent cations. 5. We present species indicator values (optima) for conductivity, major ions and proportions of those ions. We also identify diatom taxa characteristic of specific major-ion chemistries. These species optima may be useful in future interpretations... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. THE IMPORTANCE OF DIATOM CELL SIZE IN COMMUNITY ANALYSIS1.
- Author
-
Snoeijs, Pauli, Busse, Svenja, and Potapova, Marina
- Subjects
DIATOMS ,BENTHIC plants - Abstract
The large variation in size and shape in diatoms is shown by morphometric measurements of 515 benthic and pelagic diatom species from the Baltic Sea area. The largest mean cell dimension (mostly the apical axis) varied between 4.2 and 653 μm, cell surface area between 55 and 344,000 μm
2 , and cell volume between 21 and 14.2 × 106 μm3 . The shape-related index, length to width ratio, was between 1.0 and 63.3 and the shape- and size-related index, surface area to volume ratio, was between 0.02 and 3.13. Diatom community analysis by multivariate statistics is usually based on counts of a fixed number of diatom valves with species scores irrespective of cell size. This procedure underestimates the large species for two reasons. First, the importance of a species with higher cell volume is usually larger in a community. Second, larger species usually have lower abundances and their occurrence in the diatom counts is stochastic. This article shows that co-occurring small and large diatom species can respond very differently to environmental constraints. Large epiphytic diatoms responded most to macroalgal host species and small epiphytic diatoms most to environmental conditions at the sampling site. Large epilithic diatoms responded strongly to salinity, whereas small epilithic diatoms did so less clearly. The conclusion is that different scale-dependent responses are possible within one data set. The results from the test data also show that important ecological information from diatom data can be missed when the large species are neglected or underestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. THE NATURAL LIFE CYCLE IN WILD POPULATIONS OF <em>DIATOMA MONILIFORMIS</em> (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE) AND ITS DISRUPTION IN AN ABERRANT ENVIRONMENT.
- Author
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Potapova, Marina and Snoeijs, Pauli
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *PHYTOPLANKTON , *ALGAE , *BRACKISH water biology , *LIFE cycles (Biology) , *MICROORGANISMS - Abstract
We studied how size variation in populations of Diatoma moniliformis Kitz, was influenced by environmental effects on the diatom life cycle. One of the two populations sampled monthly in the northern Baltic Sea grew under natural conditions; the other population was in a cooling water discharge changed of a nuclear power plant, where the temperature and flow rate of the water were artificially higher. The life cycle was synchronous at the natural site, with sexual reproduction accuning in the winter; most of the initial cells were found in March-April. After this, a reduction in cell size occurred, and the vegetative life cycle consisted of two parts. During the first part, cell volume decreased, whereas the surface area to volume ratio increased, and during the second part of the cycle, both of these parameters decreased. No direct evidence was found for the existence of a supra-annual life cycle in D. moniliformis, as convincing modes for large cells were lacking in the size-frequency distributions. It was concluded from extrapolations of the data that the natural life cycle of D. moniliformis probably lasts 2 or 3 years. The changes in cell proportions during the life cycle fit well with included from extrapolations of the data that the natural life cycle of D. moniliformis probably lasts 2 or 3 years. The changes in cell proportions during the life cycle fit well with annual growth cycle of D. moniliformis at the natural site (i.e. the cells had high surface area to volume ratios during the period of optimal growth in late spring (May-June) At the site affected by cooling water discharge, the synchronization of the natural life cycle was disrupted, but some seasonal size variation did occur. Under natural conditions, auxosporulation is probably triggered by a combination of small cell size, low water temperature (0.3°C), and rapidly increasing light intensity or daylength in late winter to early spring. When these conditions were not met (e.g. at the heated site, the required low temperature was absent), auxosporulation did not occur simultaneously. This paper also presents scanning electron photomicrographs showing the typical shape and fine structure of the initial cell of D. moniliformis. These cells are semispherical in cross section, possess a pronounced curvature along the longitudinal axis, and are bent on the pervatuar plane. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. 18S-V9 DNA metabarcoding detects the effect of water-quality impairment on stream biofilm eukaryotic assemblages.
- Author
-
Minerovic, Alison D., Potapova, Marina G., Sales, Christopher M., Price, Jacob R., and Enache, Mihaela D.
- Subjects
- *
GENETIC barcoding , *COMPOSITION of water , *DNA , *WATER quality , *HYPERVARIABLE regions , *LIMESTONE - Abstract
• DNA metabarcoding is an emergent tool for biodiversity assessments. • Benthic eukaryotic assemblages were characterized using18S-V9 rDNA. • Diatoms, water molds, holozoans, green algae, fungi responded to stream impairment. • This approach may be recommended for biomonitoring of stream eukaryotic biota. DNA metabarcoding is rapidly expanding as a new approach to biodiversity assessments and biomonitoring and is especially valuable for characterizing microbial communities in aquatic habitats. When applied to eukaryotic organisms, metabarcoding is usually targeting specific taxonomic groups, such as macroinvertebrates, fungi, diatoms, or other protists. The goal of this study was to explore the potential use of metabarcoding of entire biofilm eukaryotic assemblages for the purpose of stream biomonitoring. We sampled 14 stream sites in New Jersey, USA along an impairment gradient and characterized rock biofilm assemblages using Illumina Mi-Seq sequencing of the V9 hypervariable region of 18S rDNA following the Earth Microbiome Project (EMP) protocol. We also enumerated diatoms from the same samples to compare DNA metabarcoding results with morphological assessments. Among the 5866 unique rDNA sequence variants, the fungal and holozoan sequences were the most diverse, while diatom sequences were the most abundant in most sites. Among-site variability of assemblage composition was significantly higher than within-site variability of field and lab replicates, which indicates an acceptable level of reproducibility of the method. Different taxonomic groups of eukaryotes exhibited similar, but not identical patterns of assemblage variation in response to underlying environmental gradients. Both morphological and metabarcoding approaches recovered strong relationships between diatom assemblage composition and water quality impairment. Several other groups of eukaryotes, such as fungi, peronosporomycetes, green algae, and holozoans had only slightly weaker response to water quality impairment than diatoms. These findings suggest that molecular characterization of biofilm eukaryotic assemblages can be an effective tool for monitoring stream biota and its responses to disturbance even if the taxonomic assignments of sequences are only partially resolved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. New audiences for new art: The public at the avant-garde exhibitions at the State Russian Museum
- Author
-
Gaav, Ludmila E. and Potapova, Marina V.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. THE IMPORTANCE OF DIATOM CELL SIZE IN COMMUNITY ANALYSIS1.
- Author
-
Snoeijs, Pauli, Busse, Svenja, and Potapova, Marina
- Subjects
- *
DIATOMS , *BENTHIC plants - Abstract
The large variation in size and shape in diatoms is shown by morphometric measurements of 515 benthic and pelagic diatom species from the Baltic Sea area. The largest mean cell dimension (mostly the apical axis) varied between 4.2 and 653 μm, cell surface area between 55 and 344,000 μm2 , and cell volume between 21 and 14.2 × 106 μm3 . The shape-related index, length to width ratio, was between 1.0 and 63.3 and the shape- and size-related index, surface area to volume ratio, was between 0.02 and 3.13. Diatom community analysis by multivariate statistics is usually based on counts of a fixed number of diatom valves with species scores irrespective of cell size. This procedure underestimates the large species for two reasons. First, the importance of a species with higher cell volume is usually larger in a community. Second, larger species usually have lower abundances and their occurrence in the diatom counts is stochastic. This article shows that co-occurring small and large diatom species can respond very differently to environmental constraints. Large epiphytic diatoms responded most to macroalgal host species and small epiphytic diatoms most to environmental conditions at the sampling site. Large epilithic diatoms responded strongly to salinity, whereas small epilithic diatoms did so less clearly. The conclusion is that different scale-dependent responses are possible within one data set. The results from the test data also show that important ecological information from diatom data can be missed when the large species are neglected or underestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Diatoms.org: supporting taxonomists, connecting communities.
- Author
-
Spaulding SA, Potapova MG, Bishop IW, Lee SS, Gasperak TS, Jovanoska E, Furey PC, and Edlund MB
- Abstract
Consistent identification of diatoms is a prerequisite for studying their ecology, biogeography, and successful application as environmental indicators. However, taxonomic consistency among observers has been difficult to achieve, because taxonomic information is scattered across numerous literature sources, presenting challenges to the diatomist. First, literature is often inaccessible because of cost, or its location in journals that are not widely circulated. Second, taxonomic revisions of diatoms are taking place faster than floras can be updated. Finally, taxonomic information is often contradictory across literature sources. These issues can be addressed by developing a content creation community dedicated to making taxonomic, ecological, and image-based data freely available for diatom researchers. Diatoms.org represents such a content curation community, providing open, online access to a vast amount of recent and historical information on North American diatom taxonomy and ecology. The content curation community aggregates existing taxonomic information, creates new content, and provides feedback in the form of corrections and notice of literature with nomenclatural changes. The website not only addresses the needs of experienced diatom scientists for consistent identification, but is also designed to meet users at their level of expertise, including engaging the lay public in the importance of diatom science. The website now contains over 1000 species pages contributed by over 100 content contributors, from students to established scientists. The project began with the intent to provide accurate information on diatom identification, ecology, and distribution using an approach that incorporates engaging design, user feedback, and advanced data access technology. In retrospect, the project that began as an "extended electronic book" has emerged not only as a means to support taxonomists, but for practitioners to communicate and collaborate, expanding the size of and benefits to the content curation community. In this paper, we outline the development of diatoms.org, document key elements of the project, examine ongoing challenges, and consider the unexpected emergent properties, including the value of diatoms.org as a source of data. Ultimately, if the field of diatom taxonomy, ecology, and biodiversity is to be relevant, a new generation of taxonomists needs to be trained and employed using new tools. We propose that diatoms.org is in a key position to serve as a hub of training and continuity for the study of diatom biodiversity and aquatic conditions.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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