Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway?
Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is thro...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
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Englisch |
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1981 |
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3 |
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Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 |
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in: Oecologia - 1968, 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 |
Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:49 ; year:1981 ; month:03 ; pages:359-361 ; extent:3 |
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520 | |a Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. | ||
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(DE-627)NLEJ205869203 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? 1981 3 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Agur, Z. oth Safriel, U. N. oth in Oecologia 1968 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 (DE-627)NLEJ18898738X (DE-600)1462019-4 1432-1939 nnns volume:49 year:1981 month:03 pages:359-361 extent:3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00347598 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 49 1981 3 359-361 3 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ205869203 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? 1981 3 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Agur, Z. oth Safriel, U. N. oth in Oecologia 1968 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 (DE-627)NLEJ18898738X (DE-600)1462019-4 1432-1939 nnns volume:49 year:1981 month:03 pages:359-361 extent:3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00347598 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 49 1981 3 359-361 3 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ205869203 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? 1981 3 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Agur, Z. oth Safriel, U. N. oth in Oecologia 1968 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 (DE-627)NLEJ18898738X (DE-600)1462019-4 1432-1939 nnns volume:49 year:1981 month:03 pages:359-361 extent:3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00347598 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 49 1981 3 359-361 3 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ205869203 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? 1981 3 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Agur, Z. oth Safriel, U. N. oth in Oecologia 1968 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 (DE-627)NLEJ18898738X (DE-600)1462019-4 1432-1939 nnns volume:49 year:1981 month:03 pages:359-361 extent:3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00347598 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 49 1981 3 359-361 3 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ205869203 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? 1981 3 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Agur, Z. oth Safriel, U. N. oth in Oecologia 1968 49(1981) vom: März, Seite 359-361 (DE-627)NLEJ18898738X (DE-600)1462019-4 1432-1939 nnns volume:49 year:1981 month:03 pages:359-361 extent:3 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00347598 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 49 1981 3 359-361 3 |
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Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? |
abstract |
Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. |
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Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Summary Since the opening of the Suez Canal, more than 120 Red Sea species colonized the eastern Mediterranean, whereas less than 10 Mediterranean species colonized the Red Sea. For most of the species involved in this colonization, the mode of dispersal from the source to the colonized area is through free-drifting propagules. In order to examine whether the current regime of the Suez Canal may be involved in this assymetry in colonization, a mathematical hydraulic model that forecasts the direction and velocity of water currents through the year, along the length of the Canal, was utilized. The movements of free-floating propagules that occur at either entrance of the Canal, was simulated on a computer, and it was found that the completion of a Mediterranean-bound passage of Red Sea propagules is far faster and much more likely than a completion of a Red Sea-bound passage of Mediterranean propagules. |
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Why is the mediterranean more readily colonized than the Red Sea, by organisms using the Suez Canal as a passageway? |
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