Anoxia (eBook, PDF)
Evidence for Eukaryote Survival and Paleontological Strategies
Schade – dieser Artikel ist leider ausverkauft. Sobald wir wissen, ob und wann der Artikel wieder verfügbar ist, informieren wir Sie an dieser Stelle.
Anoxia (eBook, PDF)
Evidence for Eukaryote Survival and Paleontological Strategies
- Format: PDF
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
- Geräte: PC
- eBook Hilfe
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Springer Netherland
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Oktober 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9789400718968
- Artikelnr.: 37410896
- Verlag: Springer Netherland
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Oktober 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9789400718968
- Artikelnr.: 37410896
Introduction.- Stepping into the book of Eukaryotes and Anoxia.- List of Authors and their Addresses.- List of External Reviewers and Referees.- Acknowledgment to authors, reviewers and any special people who assisted.-
PART I: GENERAL INTRODUCTION.- Anaerobic eukaryotes.- Biogeochemical reactions in marine sediments underlying anoxic water bodies.- Diversity of anaerobic prokaryotes and eukaryotes - breaking long-established dogmas.- PART II: FUNCTIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY.- The biochemical adaptations of mitochondrion-related organelles of parasitic and free-living microbial eukaryotes to low oxygen environments.- Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: mitochondrial adaptations to life in anaerobic environments.- Adapting to hypoxia: lessons from vascular endothelial growth factor.- PART III: MANAGING ANOXIA.- Magnetotactic protists at the oxic-anoxic transition zones of coastal aquatic environments.- A novel ciliate (Ciliophora: Hypotrichida) isolated from bathyal anoxic sediments.- The wood-eating termite hindgut: diverse cellular symbioses in a microoxic to anoxic environment.- Ecological and experimental exposure of insects to anoxia reveals suprising tolerance.- The unusual response of encysted embryos of the animal extremophile, Artemia franciscana, to prolonged anoxia.- Survival of tardigrades in extreme environments - a model animal for astrobiology.- Long-term anoxia-tolerance in flowering plants.- PART IV: FORAMINIFERA.- Benthic Foraminifera: inhabitants of low-oxygen environments.- Ecological and biological response of benthic Foraminifera under oxygen-depleted conditions: evidence from laboratory approaches.- The response of benthic Foraminifera to low-oxygen conditions of the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone.- Benthic foraminiferal communities and microhabitat selection on the continental shelf off central Peru.- PART V: ZONES AND REGIONS.- Living assemblages from the "Dead Zone" and naturally occurring hypoxic zones.- Thereturn of shallow shelf seas as extreme environments: Anoxia and macrofauna reactions in the northern Adriatic Sea.- Meiobenthos of the oxic/anoxic interface in the south-western region of the Black Sea: abundance and taxonomic composition.- The role of eukaryotes in the anaerobic food web of stratified lakes.- The anoxic Framvaren fjord as a model system to study protistan diversity and evolution.- Characterizing an anoxic habitat: sulphur bacteria in a meromictic alpine lake.- Ophel, the newly discovered hypoxic chemolitho-autotrophic groundwater biome - a window to ancient animal life.- Microbial eukaryotes in the marine subsurface? - PART VI: MODERN ANALOGS AND TEMPLATES FOR EARTH HISTORY.- On the use of stable nitrogen isotopes in present and past anoxic environments.- Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fractionation in Foraminifera: possible signatures from anoxia.- The functionality of pores in benthic Foraminifera in view of bottom water oxygenation. A review.- Anoxia-dysoxia at the sediment-water interface of the southern Tethys in the late Cretaceous: Mishash formation, southern Israel.- Styles of agglutination in benthic Foraminifera from modern Santa Barbara basin sediments and the implications of finding fossil analogs in Devonian and Mississippian black shales.- Did redox conditions trigger test templates in Proterozoic Foraminifera?- The relevance of anoxic and agglutinated benthic Foraminifera to the possible Archean evolution of eukaryotes.- PART VII: FINALS.
PART I: GENERAL INTRODUCTION.- Anaerobic eukaryotes.- Biogeochemical reactions in marine sediments underlying anoxic water bodies.- Diversity of anaerobic prokaryotes and eukaryotes - breaking long-established dogmas.- PART II: FUNCTIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY.- The biochemical adaptations of mitochondrion-related organelles of parasitic and free-living microbial eukaryotes to low oxygen environments.- Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: mitochondrial adaptations to life in anaerobic environments.- Adapting to hypoxia: lessons from vascular endothelial growth factor.- PART III: MANAGING ANOXIA.- Magnetotactic protists at the oxic-anoxic transition zones of coastal aquatic environments.- A novel ciliate (Ciliophora: Hypotrichida) isolated from bathyal anoxic sediments.- The wood-eating termite hindgut: diverse cellular symbioses in a microoxic to anoxic environment.- Ecological and experimental exposure of insects to anoxia reveals suprising tolerance.- The unusual response of encysted embryos of the animal extremophile, Artemia franciscana, to prolonged anoxia.- Survival of tardigrades in extreme environments - a model animal for astrobiology.- Long-term anoxia-tolerance in flowering plants.- PART IV: FORAMINIFERA.- Benthic Foraminifera: inhabitants of low-oxygen environments.- Ecological and biological response of benthic Foraminifera under oxygen-depleted conditions: evidence from laboratory approaches.- The response of benthic Foraminifera to low-oxygen conditions of the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone.- Benthic foraminiferal communities and microhabitat selection on the continental shelf off central Peru.- PART V: ZONES AND REGIONS.- Living assemblages from the "Dead Zone" and naturally occurring hypoxic zones.- Thereturn of shallow shelf seas as extreme environments: Anoxia and macrofauna reactions in the northern Adriatic Sea.- Meiobenthos of the oxic/anoxic interface in the south-western region of the Black Sea: abundance and taxonomic composition.- The role of eukaryotes in the anaerobic food web of stratified lakes.- The anoxic Framvaren fjord as a model system to study protistan diversity and evolution.- Characterizing an anoxic habitat: sulphur bacteria in a meromictic alpine lake.- Ophel, the newly discovered hypoxic chemolitho-autotrophic groundwater biome - a window to ancient animal life.- Microbial eukaryotes in the marine subsurface? - PART VI: MODERN ANALOGS AND TEMPLATES FOR EARTH HISTORY.- On the use of stable nitrogen isotopes in present and past anoxic environments.- Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fractionation in Foraminifera: possible signatures from anoxia.- The functionality of pores in benthic Foraminifera in view of bottom water oxygenation. A review.- Anoxia-dysoxia at the sediment-water interface of the southern Tethys in the late Cretaceous: Mishash formation, southern Israel.- Styles of agglutination in benthic Foraminifera from modern Santa Barbara basin sediments and the implications of finding fossil analogs in Devonian and Mississippian black shales.- Did redox conditions trigger test templates in Proterozoic Foraminifera?- The relevance of anoxic and agglutinated benthic Foraminifera to the possible Archean evolution of eukaryotes.- PART VII: FINALS.
Introduction.- Stepping into the book of Eukaryotes and Anoxia.- List of Authors and their Addresses.- List of External Reviewers and Referees.- Acknowledgment to authors, reviewers and any special people who assisted.-
PART I: GENERAL INTRODUCTION.- Anaerobic eukaryotes.- Biogeochemical reactions in marine sediments underlying anoxic water bodies.- Diversity of anaerobic prokaryotes and eukaryotes - breaking long-established dogmas.- PART II: FUNCTIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY.- The biochemical adaptations of mitochondrion-related organelles of parasitic and free-living microbial eukaryotes to low oxygen environments.- Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: mitochondrial adaptations to life in anaerobic environments.- Adapting to hypoxia: lessons from vascular endothelial growth factor.- PART III: MANAGING ANOXIA.- Magnetotactic protists at the oxic-anoxic transition zones of coastal aquatic environments.- A novel ciliate (Ciliophora: Hypotrichida) isolated from bathyal anoxic sediments.- The wood-eating termite hindgut: diverse cellular symbioses in a microoxic to anoxic environment.- Ecological and experimental exposure of insects to anoxia reveals suprising tolerance.- The unusual response of encysted embryos of the animal extremophile, Artemia franciscana, to prolonged anoxia.- Survival of tardigrades in extreme environments - a model animal for astrobiology.- Long-term anoxia-tolerance in flowering plants.- PART IV: FORAMINIFERA.- Benthic Foraminifera: inhabitants of low-oxygen environments.- Ecological and biological response of benthic Foraminifera under oxygen-depleted conditions: evidence from laboratory approaches.- The response of benthic Foraminifera to low-oxygen conditions of the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone.- Benthic foraminiferal communities and microhabitat selection on the continental shelf off central Peru.- PART V: ZONES AND REGIONS.- Living assemblages from the "Dead Zone" and naturally occurring hypoxic zones.- Thereturn of shallow shelf seas as extreme environments: Anoxia and macrofauna reactions in the northern Adriatic Sea.- Meiobenthos of the oxic/anoxic interface in the south-western region of the Black Sea: abundance and taxonomic composition.- The role of eukaryotes in the anaerobic food web of stratified lakes.- The anoxic Framvaren fjord as a model system to study protistan diversity and evolution.- Characterizing an anoxic habitat: sulphur bacteria in a meromictic alpine lake.- Ophel, the newly discovered hypoxic chemolitho-autotrophic groundwater biome - a window to ancient animal life.- Microbial eukaryotes in the marine subsurface? - PART VI: MODERN ANALOGS AND TEMPLATES FOR EARTH HISTORY.- On the use of stable nitrogen isotopes in present and past anoxic environments.- Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fractionation in Foraminifera: possible signatures from anoxia.- The functionality of pores in benthic Foraminifera in view of bottom water oxygenation. A review.- Anoxia-dysoxia at the sediment-water interface of the southern Tethys in the late Cretaceous: Mishash formation, southern Israel.- Styles of agglutination in benthic Foraminifera from modern Santa Barbara basin sediments and the implications of finding fossil analogs in Devonian and Mississippian black shales.- Did redox conditions trigger test templates in Proterozoic Foraminifera?- The relevance of anoxic and agglutinated benthic Foraminifera to the possible Archean evolution of eukaryotes.- PART VII: FINALS.
PART I: GENERAL INTRODUCTION.- Anaerobic eukaryotes.- Biogeochemical reactions in marine sediments underlying anoxic water bodies.- Diversity of anaerobic prokaryotes and eukaryotes - breaking long-established dogmas.- PART II: FUNCTIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY.- The biochemical adaptations of mitochondrion-related organelles of parasitic and free-living microbial eukaryotes to low oxygen environments.- Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: mitochondrial adaptations to life in anaerobic environments.- Adapting to hypoxia: lessons from vascular endothelial growth factor.- PART III: MANAGING ANOXIA.- Magnetotactic protists at the oxic-anoxic transition zones of coastal aquatic environments.- A novel ciliate (Ciliophora: Hypotrichida) isolated from bathyal anoxic sediments.- The wood-eating termite hindgut: diverse cellular symbioses in a microoxic to anoxic environment.- Ecological and experimental exposure of insects to anoxia reveals suprising tolerance.- The unusual response of encysted embryos of the animal extremophile, Artemia franciscana, to prolonged anoxia.- Survival of tardigrades in extreme environments - a model animal for astrobiology.- Long-term anoxia-tolerance in flowering plants.- PART IV: FORAMINIFERA.- Benthic Foraminifera: inhabitants of low-oxygen environments.- Ecological and biological response of benthic Foraminifera under oxygen-depleted conditions: evidence from laboratory approaches.- The response of benthic Foraminifera to low-oxygen conditions of the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone.- Benthic foraminiferal communities and microhabitat selection on the continental shelf off central Peru.- PART V: ZONES AND REGIONS.- Living assemblages from the "Dead Zone" and naturally occurring hypoxic zones.- Thereturn of shallow shelf seas as extreme environments: Anoxia and macrofauna reactions in the northern Adriatic Sea.- Meiobenthos of the oxic/anoxic interface in the south-western region of the Black Sea: abundance and taxonomic composition.- The role of eukaryotes in the anaerobic food web of stratified lakes.- The anoxic Framvaren fjord as a model system to study protistan diversity and evolution.- Characterizing an anoxic habitat: sulphur bacteria in a meromictic alpine lake.- Ophel, the newly discovered hypoxic chemolitho-autotrophic groundwater biome - a window to ancient animal life.- Microbial eukaryotes in the marine subsurface? - PART VI: MODERN ANALOGS AND TEMPLATES FOR EARTH HISTORY.- On the use of stable nitrogen isotopes in present and past anoxic environments.- Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fractionation in Foraminifera: possible signatures from anoxia.- The functionality of pores in benthic Foraminifera in view of bottom water oxygenation. A review.- Anoxia-dysoxia at the sediment-water interface of the southern Tethys in the late Cretaceous: Mishash formation, southern Israel.- Styles of agglutination in benthic Foraminifera from modern Santa Barbara basin sediments and the implications of finding fossil analogs in Devonian and Mississippian black shales.- Did redox conditions trigger test templates in Proterozoic Foraminifera?- The relevance of anoxic and agglutinated benthic Foraminifera to the possible Archean evolution of eukaryotes.- PART VII: FINALS.