Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish

The ecology of Austropotamobius pallipes (Lereboullet) from Markfield Quarry and the River Leen was described. Studies included: 1. Biology. (i) Timing of life cycle events. They related to ambient conditions, especially temperature. (ii) Fecundity. Individual fecundity increased with female size. P...

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Main Author: Mees, Christopher Charles
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1983
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13294/
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author Mees, Christopher Charles
author_facet Mees, Christopher Charles
author_sort Mees, Christopher Charles
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The ecology of Austropotamobius pallipes (Lereboullet) from Markfield Quarry and the River Leen was described. Studies included: 1. Biology. (i) Timing of life cycle events. They related to ambient conditions, especially temperature. (ii) Fecundity. Individual fecundity increased with female size. Population fecundity related to population density. (iii) Local distribution. This related to hide availability. Gross water quality affected the distribution of the river crayfish. 2. Population dynamics. (i) Population size/density. That of the Quarry was greater, and related to hide availability. Seasonal variations in population size were temperature dependent. (ii) Population structure. - size structure varied between populations due to collection techniques. It varied seasonally due to recruitment and differential catchability of certain sub-populations. - sex ratios varied seasonally due to reduced foraging by ovigerous females. - disease and damage occurred for all sizes/sexes. Thelohania contejeanii was absent from Markfield Quarry but increased in the Leen during the study period. 3. Growth. (i) At moulting. Sexual differences were absent for the absolute increment, but males grew quicker due to greater moult frequencies. Growth rates of river animals were greatest due to a longer growing season and smaller population density. (ii) Relative growth of body parts. No consistent population differences occurred, but of significance were chelae and rostrum sizes. Sexual dimorphism occurred for certain variables, notably the chelae and abdomen width. The effects of cadmium and Lindane upon A. pallipes were examined. Studies included: 1. Survival. Juveniles were 10 times more sensitive than adults. Lindane was the most toxic. 2. Uptake and depuration. Cadmium accumulated chiefly in the gills. Some evidence for its translocation to other tissues was found. No sexual differences occurred. Lindane accumulated chiefly in the hepatopancreas. Evidence for its translocation and depuration was shown. No sexual differences occurred. 3. Tissue oxygen consumption. Both toxicants caused a depression. Recovery occurred with time. The results were related to the levels of toxicant in Midlands waters.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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spelling nottingham-132942025-02-28T11:24:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13294/ Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish Mees, Christopher Charles The ecology of Austropotamobius pallipes (Lereboullet) from Markfield Quarry and the River Leen was described. Studies included: 1. Biology. (i) Timing of life cycle events. They related to ambient conditions, especially temperature. (ii) Fecundity. Individual fecundity increased with female size. Population fecundity related to population density. (iii) Local distribution. This related to hide availability. Gross water quality affected the distribution of the river crayfish. 2. Population dynamics. (i) Population size/density. That of the Quarry was greater, and related to hide availability. Seasonal variations in population size were temperature dependent. (ii) Population structure. - size structure varied between populations due to collection techniques. It varied seasonally due to recruitment and differential catchability of certain sub-populations. - sex ratios varied seasonally due to reduced foraging by ovigerous females. - disease and damage occurred for all sizes/sexes. Thelohania contejeanii was absent from Markfield Quarry but increased in the Leen during the study period. 3. Growth. (i) At moulting. Sexual differences were absent for the absolute increment, but males grew quicker due to greater moult frequencies. Growth rates of river animals were greatest due to a longer growing season and smaller population density. (ii) Relative growth of body parts. No consistent population differences occurred, but of significance were chelae and rostrum sizes. Sexual dimorphism occurred for certain variables, notably the chelae and abdomen width. The effects of cadmium and Lindane upon A. pallipes were examined. Studies included: 1. Survival. Juveniles were 10 times more sensitive than adults. Lindane was the most toxic. 2. Uptake and depuration. Cadmium accumulated chiefly in the gills. Some evidence for its translocation to other tissues was found. No sexual differences occurred. Lindane accumulated chiefly in the hepatopancreas. Evidence for its translocation and depuration was shown. No sexual differences occurred. 3. Tissue oxygen consumption. Both toxicants caused a depression. Recovery occurred with time. The results were related to the levels of toxicant in Midlands waters. 1983 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13294/1/346494.pdf Mees, Christopher Charles (1983) Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Mees, Christopher Charles
Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title_full Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title_fullStr Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title_short Ecological and pollution studies of the British crayfish
title_sort ecological and pollution studies of the british crayfish
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13294/