Published April 29, 2013 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Distribution and ecology of Ostracoda (Crustacea) from troughs in Turkey

Description

Külköylüoğlu, Okan, Akdemir, Derya, Sari, Necmettin, Yavuzatmaca, Mehmet, Oral, Ceren, Başak, Elif (2013): Distribution and ecology of Ostracoda (Crustacea) from troughs in Turkey. Turkish Journal of Zoology 37 (4): 277-287, DOI: 10.3906/zoo-1205-17, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3906/zoo-1205-17

Files

source.pdf

Files (244.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:2acec2a40087b29ce0b0a658cbfbc71a
244.1 kB Preview Download

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

LSID
urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FFCEFFA4FF87FF9CFFB0A658FFFBC71A

Related works

Has part
Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13191330 (DOI)
Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13191332 (DOI)

References

  • Bronshtein, Z.S. 1988. Freshwater Ostracoda. Fauna of the USSR, Crustaceans, Vol. 2 (1). Academy of Sciences of the USSR and Zoological Institute. Amerind, New Delhi, Calcutta, India (English translation).
  • Burt, J., Bartholomew, A., Usseglio, P., Bauman, A. and Sale, P.F. 2009. Are artificial reefs surrogates of natural habitats for corals and fish in Dubai, United Arab Emirates? Coral Reefs 28: 663-675.
  • Carr, M.H. and Hixon, M.A. 1997. Artificial reefs: the importance of comparisons with natural reefs. Fisheries 22: 28-33.
  • Chaplin, J.A. and Ayre, D.J. 1997. Genetic evidence of widespread dispersal in a parthenogenetic freshwater ostracod. Heredity 78: 57-67.
  • Cianficconi, F., Corallini, C. and Moretti, G.P. 1998. Trichopteran fauna of the Italian springs. In: Studies in Crenobiology (Ed. L. Botosaneanu). Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, pp. 125-140.
  • Cohen, A.S. and Johnston, M.R. 1987. Speciation in brooding and poorly dispersing lacustrine organisms. Palaios 5: 426-435.
  • De Deckker, P. 1981. Ostracoda from Australian inland waters: notes on taxonomy and ecology. Proc. Roy. Soc. Vict. 93: 43-85.
  • Forester, R.M. and Brouwers, E.M. 1985. Hydrochemical parameters governing the occurrence of estuarine and marginal estuarine ostracodes: an example from south-central Alaska. J. Paleontol. 59: 344-369.
  • Fryer, G. 1997. The horse-trough ostracod Heterocypris incongruens. Naturalist 122: 121-135.
  • Glasby, T.M. and Connell, S.D. 1999. Urban structures as marine habitats. AMBIO 28: 595-598.
  • Godoy, E.A.S. and Coutinho, R. 2002. Can artificial beds of plastic mimics compensate for seasonal absence of natural beds of Sargassum furcatum? ICES J. Mar. Sci. 59: 111-115.
  • Horne, A.J. and Goldman, C.R. 1994. Limnology, 2nd ed. McGraw- Hill, New York.
  • Juggins, S. 2001. CALIBRATE Version 1.0. A C++ program for analyzing and visualizing species environment relationships and for predicting environment values from species assemblages. University of Newcastle, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
  • Juggins, S. 2003. Software for Ecological and Palaeoecological Data Analysis and Visualization. C2 User Guide. University of Newcastle, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
  • Karanovic, I. 2006. Recent Candoninae (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Candonidae) of North America. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 71: 1-75.
  • Kesling, R.V. and Crafts, F.C. 1962. Ontogenetic increase in Archimedean weight of the ostracod Chlamydotheca unispinosa (Baird). Am. Midl. Nat. 68: 149-153.
  • King, J.L., Simovich, M.A. and Brusca, R.C. 1996. Species richness, endemism and ecology of crustacean assemblages in northern California vernal pools. Hydrobiologia 328: 85-116.
  • Kovach, W. 1998. Multivariate statistical package, version 3.0. Kovach Computer Services, Pentraeth, Anglesey, UK.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O. 1999. Seasonal distribution of freshwater Ostracoda (Crustacea) in springs of Nevada. Geosound-Sci. Tech. Bull. Earth Sci. 35: 85-91.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O. 2003. A new report and the loss of Scottia pseudobrowniana KEMPF, 1971 (Ostracoda) from a limnocrene spring in Bolu, Turkey. Crustaceana 76: 257-384.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O. 2004. On the usage of ostracods (Crustacea) as bioindicator species in different aquatic habitats in the Bolu region, Turkey. Ecol. Indic. 4: 139-147.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O. 2005. Factors affecting Ostracoda (Crustacea) occurrence in Yumrukaya Reedbeds (Bolu, Turkey). Wetlands 25: 224-227.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O., Akdemir, D. and Yuce, R. 2012a. Distribution, ecological tolerance and optimum levels of freshwater Ostracoda (Crustacea) from Diyarbakir, Turkey. Limnology 13: 73-80.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O., Dugel, M., Balci, M., Deveci, A., Avuka, D. and Kilic, M. 2010. Limnoecological relationships between water level fluctuations and Ostracoda (Crustacea) species composition in Lake Sunnet (Bolu, Turkey). Turk. J. Zool. 34: 429-442.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O., Sari, N. and Akdemir, D. 2012b. Distribution and ecological requirements of Ostracods (Crustacea) at high altitudinal ranges in Northeastern Van (Turkey). Ann. Limnol. - Int. J. Lim. 48: 39-51.
  • Kulkoyluoglu, O. and Vinyard, G.L. 2000. Distribution and ecology of freshwater Ostracoda (Crustacea) collected from springs of Nevada, Idaho, and Oregon: a preliminary study. West. N. Am. Naturalist 60: 291-303.
  • Lim, T.M., McKaye, K.R. and Weiland, D.J. 1976. An investigation into the use of artificial habitats as a means of increasing the fishery productivity of the Great Lakes Complex of Nicaragua. In: Investigations of the Ichthyofauna of Nicaraguan Lakes (Ed. T.B. Thorson). University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, pp. 311-319.
  • Lopez, L.C.S., Goncalves, D.A., Mantovani, A. and Rios, R.I. 2002. Bromeliad ostracods pass through amphibian (Scinaxax perpusillus) and mammalian guts alive. Hydrobiologia 485: 209-211.
  • Meisch, C. 2000. Freshwater Ostracoda of Western and Central Europe. Susswasserfauna von Mitteleuropa 8/3. Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, Heidelberg, Berlin.
  • Mezquita, F., Griffiths, H.I., Sanz, S., Soria, J.M. and Pinon, A. 1999. Ecology and distribution of ostracods associated with flowing waters in the eastern Iberian Peninsula. J. Crust. Biol. 19: 344- 354.
  • Rossi, V., Benassi, G., Veneri, M., Bellavere, C., Menozzi, P., Moroni A. and McKenzie, K.G. 2003. Ostracoda of the Italian ricefields thirty years on: new synthesis and hypothesis. J. Limnology 62: 1-8.
  • Rouch,R.and Danielopol,D.L.1997.Species richness of microcrustacea in subterranean freshwater habitats: comparative analysis and approximate evaluation. Int. Rev. Gesamten Hydrobiol. 82: 121-145.
  • Seaby, R.M. and Henderson, P.A. 2006. Species Diversity and Richness, Version 4. Pisces Conservation Ltd., Lymington, UK.
  • Simovich, M.A. 1998. Crustacean biodiversity and endemism in California's ephemeral wetlands. In: Ecology, Conservation, and Management of Vernal Pool Ecosystems: Proceedings from a 1996 Conference (Eds. C.V. Witham, E.T. Bauder, D. Belk Jr, W.R. Ferren and R. Ornduff ). California Native Plant Society, Sacramento, CA, pp. 107-118.
  • Smith, S.D.A. and Rule, M.J. 2002. Artificial substrata in a shallow sublittoral habitat: do they adequately represent natural habitats or the local species pool? J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 277: 25-41.
  • Solow, A.R. 1993. A simple test for change in community structure. J. Anim. Ecol. 62: 191-193.
  • ter Braak, C.J.F. 1987. The analysis of vegetation-environment relationships by canonical correspondence analysis. Vegetatio 69: 69-77.
  • ter Braak, C.J.F. and Barendregt, L.G. 1986. Weighted averaging of species indicator values: its efficiency in environmental prediction. Mathem. Biosci. 78: 57-72.
  • ter Braak, C.J.F. and Van Dam, H. 1989. Inferring pH from diatoms: a comparison of old and new methods. Hydrobiologia. 178: 209-223.
  • TODAIE. 2011. Koyler. Institute of Public Administration for Turkey and Middle East, Ankara. Available from www.yerelnet.org.tr. Appendix. Distribution of 32 ostracod taxa in105 troughs from 6provinces (Bolu,Erzincan, Gaziantep, Kahramanmaras, Ordu, Van) is shown,along with some of the physicochemical and geographical data measured. Abbreviations: Code, station code; SHE, standard hydrogen electrode (mV); DO, dissolved oxygen (mg/L); EC, electrical conductivity (µS/cm); TDS, total dissolved solids (mg/L); Tw, water temperature (°C); Sal, salinity (ppt); Alt, altitude (m); Mean, mean number; Max., maximum number; Min., minimum number; na, not available due to technical problems; St. dev., standard deviation. Species codes (Sp. code): CA, Candona angulata; CC, C. candida; Cli, C. lindneri; CN, C. neglecta; CS, C. sanociensis; CV, Cypridopsis vidua*; Cpu, Cypris pubera; DS, Darwinula stevensoni; Dsi, Dolerocypris sinensis*; FF, Fabaeformiscandona fabaeformis; FL, F. latens; HR, Herpetocypris reptans; HB, H. brevicaudata; HI, Heterocypris incongruens; Hro, H. rotundata; Hsa, H. salina; Ibr, Ilyocypris bradyi; IG, I. gibba; II, I. inermis; PF, Potamocypris fallax; Pfu, P.fulva; PP, P. pallida; Psi, P. similis; PU, P. unicaudata; PV, P. variegeta*; Pvi, P. villosa; Pot, Potamocypris sp.; Pze, Prionocypris zenkeri; PAI, Pseudocandona albicans; PC, P. compressa; Pse, P. semicognita; Pfo, Psychrodromus fontinalis; PO, Psychrodromus olivaceus; SP, Scottia pseudobrowniana; TL, Trajancypris laevis. Bold letters show subfossil forms of taxa. *: Species were found near the trough where water flows out of the trough and were not included in the analyses.