• Title/Summary/Keyword: tide pool

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Investigation of marine bacteria for the food of Tigriopus japonicus Mori(Harpacticoida) (동물플랑크톤 Harpacticoid, Tigriopus japonicus Mori 배양에 유효한 해양세균의 탐색)

  • Lee Won-Jae;TAGA Nobuo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.50-56
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    • 1988
  • In order to fine some proper bacterial food for Tigriopus japoncus, bacterial flora of the tide pool inhabited by the copepod has been isolated and tested as bacterial food. Food effect and optimum density of the bacteria in terms of survival rate of the copepod was measured in the larval and the adult stages. Among the 264 strains of isolated bacteria, Acinetobacter spp. Moraxella, spp., Flavobacterium spp. and Pseudomonas spp. were certified as effective food for the copepod. According to the experimental results, Acinetobacter spp. AG-3 was the most effective food for all the stages from nauplius to adult, while Moraxella spp. and Flavobacterium spp. were effective for copepodite stage, and Pseudomonas spp. for the adult stage only. The optimum density of bacteria for the food was about $10^6\;cell/ml$, which was the same average density of bacteria in the tide pool.

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Environmental Condition and Microbial Survey of the Tide Pools Densely Inhabited by Tigriopus japonicus MORI (동물성 플랑크톤 Harpacticoid, Tigriopus japonicus MORI가 서식하는 Tide Pool 생태계의 조사)

  • LEE Won Jae;TAGA Nobuo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.57-62
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    • 1985
  • The three tide pools of Kanagawagen Aburatsubo coast, Japan were studied for 5 months (June-October, 1991) to know the physicochemical factors and changes of the microflora, In the tide pools salinity was ${\simeq}35\%0$, temperature range was $14{\sim}32^{\circ}C$ and pH range was $7.4{\sim}8.9$. Particulate organic carbon (POC) was $255{\sim}3980\;{\mu}g-at/l$, and total phosphate-P was $1.0{\sim}27.0\;{\mu}g-at/l$. The numbers of suspended bacteria and heterotrophic bacteria on the algae were $10^4{\sim}10^7/ml$ and $10^6{\sim}10^8/g$, respectively. Bacterial flora isolated from the Samples were Acinetobacter spp., Moraxella spp., Flavobacterium spp. and Pseudomonas spp., While Acinetobacter spp. was predominant among them. T. japonicus occurred dominantly with densities of $2200{\sim}7000/l$ during $August{\sim}september$. During this period the sharp increases of the unicellular microalgae and the protozoans were observed. According to the experimental results (POC, total phosphate-P, numbers and composition of bacterial flora), T. japonicus seemed to inhabit the environment with high eutrophication and high variability.

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Feeding Ecology of Luciogobius guttatus (Pisces; Gobiidae) in the Youngjong Tide Pool, Incheon, Korea (영종도 조수웅덩이에 서식하는 미끈망둑, Luciogobius guttatus(Gobiidae)의 식성)

  • Kim, Byung Gi;Kim, Ji Hye;Chung, Su Whan;Han, Kyung Nam
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.202-211
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    • 2014
  • Feeding ecology of Luciogobius guttatus (Flat-head goby) populations were investigated on the Youngjong, Incheon, Korea. In total, 257 individuals ranging from 13.4 to 57.5 mm standard length SL were analyzed. L. guttatus was studied in the Tide-pool from January 2010 to December 2010 monthly. The stomach contents of L. guttatus consisted mainly of Copepods and Brachyurans. Amphipods, Anomurans, Cumaceans, Macrurans, Insects and small stones were also observed. As a result, the benthic crustaceans were important food for this species. Harpacticoid spp. (Copepods) and Hemigrapsus spp. (Brachyurans) were major prey organisms for all fish size and seasons.

A new Family of Poecilostomatoid Copepods (Polyankyliidae) from a Tide Pool on Mud Flat in Korea

  • Ho, Ju-Shey;Kim, Il-Hoi
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.1 no.3
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    • pp.429-434
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    • 1997
  • A new genus with a new species of poecilostomatoid copepod, Polyankylis orientalis, is described based on a pair of specimens collected from a tide pool on muddy shore in Korea. It represents a new family of the lichomolgoid complex with the following distinguishing characters: (1) 6-segmented antennule (resulted from the fusion of the third and fourth segments) with additional aesthetascs in male, (2) hook on mediodistal corner of antennal coxobasis (first segment), (3) proximal and distal scales on the outer margin of mandible present, (4) main axis of mandibular gnathobase short and lacking notches at the base of mandibular lash, and (5) inner margin of mandibular lash with denticulate processes. Additionally, maxillar syncoxa carries a large, pointed process on ventral surface, legs 1-4 do not show sexua1 dimorphism, and leg 4 is uniramous with 1-segmented exopod. A detailed discussion is given of its affinities with the ten existing families of the lichomolgoid complex.

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Tide-pool Fishes from Saemangeum Waters (새만금 해역 조수 웅덩이의 어류)

  • Choi, Youn;Lim, Hwan-Cheol;Ra, Hye-Kang;Yang, Jae-Sam;Choi, Kang Won
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.142-147
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    • 2005
  • To research changes in the fish community of intertidal zones in relation to the construction of the Saemangeum tidal embankment, fishes were collected in the tide pools of Naechodo, Gunsan-si, and of Haechang, Buan-gun in Jeollabuk-do, every month from December 2002 to October 2004. Based on the fishes collected and data from previous studies show that in the tide pools of Haechang, the number of species decreased, and the dominant species is Tridentiger trigonocephalus, as before. However, in the tide pools of Naechodo, the number of species decreased, and the dominant species changed from T. trigonocephalus to Synechogobius hasta. Favonigobius gymnauchen, which inhabits sand-beds, decreased remarkably. Meanwhile, in the intertidal zone of Haechang, young black porgy were caught in large quantities, while in the intertidal zone of Naechodo, young Acanthopagrus schlegelii and Lateolabrax japonicus, which had been caught in a large amounts between 1994 and 2000, were not caught. The results are thought to show that the intertidal zone of Naechodo, Gunsan-si, had more deposits by tide flats than that of Haechang, Buan-gun, which drastically changed the habitat of its fish community.

Species Composition and Vertical Distribution Pattern of Fish in Rock Tidal Pools at Mohang, Taeanhaean National Park (태안해안국립공원 모항 암반조간대 웅덩이의 어류 종조성과 수직분포)

  • Choi, Youn;Lee, Heung-Heon
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.227-233
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    • 2013
  • Speceis composition and distribution by altitude of fish in the rock tide pools in Taean were determined using montly samples collected in the 9 tide pools from January to December 2010. Among 16 species collected, a forktongue goby Chaenogobius annularis was dominant accounting for 34.6% in the total number of individuals, and followed by Dictysoma burgeri (22.0%), Sebastes schlegelii (6.9%) and Tridentiger trigonocephalus (6.8%). A resident fish Dictyosoma burger occurred at all tide pools, and Chasmichthys dolichognathus was dominant in the upper tide pools and was collected throughout the study period. The resident fish is more abundant than the transient fish and occasional fish accounted for 61.4%, 14.2% and 24.4% in biomass, respectively.

Limnological Study on Spring-Bloom of a Green Algae, Eudorina elegans and Weirwater PulsedFlows in the Midstream (Seungchon Weir Pool) of the Yeongsan River, Korea (영산강 중류 (승촌보)의 봄철 녹조류 Eudorina elegans 대발생과 봇물 펄스방류에 대한 육수학적 고찰)

  • Shin, Jae-Ki;Kang, Bok-Gyoo;Hwang, Soon-Jin
    • Korean Journal of Ecology and Environment
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    • v.49 no.4
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    • pp.320-333
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    • 2016
  • This study was carried out to elucidate the development of unprecedented water-bloom caused by a single species of colonial green algae Eudorina elegans in the upstream area of the Seungchon weir located in the Yeongsan River from late April to May 2013. The Yeongsan River is typically regulated system and the waterbody is seriously enriched by both external and internal sources of nutrients. Seasonal algal outbreaks were highly probable due to various potential factors, such as the excessive nutrients contained in treated wastewater, slow current, high irradiation and temperature, in diatom (winter), green algae (spring) and bluegreen algae (summer). Spring green-tide was attributed to E. elegans with level up to $1,000mg\;m^{-3}$(>$50{\times}10^4cells\;mL^{-1}$). The bloom was exploded in the initial period of the algal development and after then gradually diminished with transporting to the downstream by the intermittent rainfall, resulting in rapid expansion of the distribution range. Although the pulsed-flows by the weir manipulation was applied to control algal bloom, they were not the countermeasures to solve the underlying problem, but rather there still was a remaining problem related to the impact of pulsed-flows on the downstream. The green-tide of E. elegans in this particular region of the Yeongsan River revealed the blooming characteristics of a colonial motile microalga, and fate of vanishing away by the succeeding episodic events of mesoscale rainfall. We believe that the results of the present study contribute to limno-ecological understanding of the green-tide caused by blue-green algae in the four major rivers, Korea.

Isolation of Protease-Producing Arctic Marine Bacteria

  • Lee, Yoo-Kyung;Sung, Ki-Cheol;Yim, Joung-Han;Park, Kyu-Jin;Chung, Ho-Sung;Lee, Hong-Kum
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.215-219
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    • 2005
  • We isolated and identified three protease-producing bacteria that had inhabited the region around the Korean Arctic Research Station Dasan located at Ny-Alesund, Svalbard, Norway $(79^{\circ}N,\;12^{\circ}E)$. Biofilms were collected from the surface of a floating pier and from dead brown algae in a tide pool near the seashore. The biofilm samples were transported to the Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI) under frozen conditions, diluted in sterilized seawater, and cultured on Zobell agar plates with 1% skim milk at $10^{\circ}C$. Three clear zone forming colonies were selected as protease-producing bacteria. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rDNA sequences showed that these three stains shared high sequence similarities with Pseudoalteromonas elyakovii, Exiguobacterium oxidotofewm Pseudomonas jessenii, respectively. We expect these Arctic bacteria may be used to develop new varieties of protease that are active at low temperatures.

Tracking the Movement and Distribution of Green Tides on the Yellow Sea in 2015 Based on GOCI and Landsat Images

  • Min, Seung-Hwan;Oh, Hyun-Ju;Hwang, Jae-Dong;Suh, Young-Sang;Park, Mi-Ok;Shin, Ji-Sun;Kim, Wonkook
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.97-109
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    • 2017
  • Green tides that developed along the coast of China in 2015 were detected and tracked using vegetation indices from GOCI and Landsat images. Green tides first appeared near the Jiangsu Province on May 14 before increasing in size and number and moving northward to the Shandong Peninsula in mid-June. Typhoon Cham-hom passed through the Yellow Sea on July 12, significantly decreasing the algal population. An algae patch moved east toward Korea and on June 18 and July 4, several masses were found between the southwestern shores of Korea and Jeju Island. The floating masses found in Korean waters were concentrated at the boundary of the open sea and the Jindo cold pool, a phenomenon also observed at the boundary of coastal and offshore waters in China. Sea surface temperatures, derived from NOAA SST data, were found to play a role in generation of the green tides.

An Ecological Study on Gobioid (Favonigobius gymnauchen) in Korea (한국산 날개망둑의 생태학적 연구)

  • Choi, Youn;Jong-yeon Kim;Yong Tae Rho
    • The Korean Journal of Ecology
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.217-222
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    • 1996
  • For the ecological study on the gobioid (Favonigobius gymnauchen), samples were collected in the Korean coasts from 1983 to 1995, and the process of ovarian maturation, spawning season, settling period of young individuals and growth were investigated with the specimens collected from Kunsan coast. The ovarian egg development of this species underwent three stages; growth stage from March to April, maturity stage from May to June and spawning stage in July. All the adults died after spawning in late July. Young individuals of total length 10 mm began to live a bottom life in the tide pool of shallow waters in early and middle August. The total length of these individuals reached about 42.1 mm (mean 36.7 mm) in late November. The largest specimen examined in this study was 85.0mm of male. After that time, individuals of this species inhabited in subtidal zone from December to May of the next year. The Favonigobius gymnauchen is distributed at 17 areas of shallow waters and estuaries in the western and southern coasts of Korea.

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