The Magnitude of Global Marine Species Diversity
- W. Appeltans, S. Ahyong, Mark John Costello
- Environmental ScienceCurrent Biology
- 4 December 2012
The diel migrations and distributions within a mesopelagic community in the North East Atlantic. 7. Siphonophores
- P. Pugh
- Environmental Science
- 1984
Common and scientific names of aquatic invertebrates from the United States and Canada : Cnidaria and Ctenophora
- S. Cairns, Dale R. Calder, D. Opresko
- Environmental Science
- 2002
Summer phytoplankton blooms and red tides along tidal fronts in the approaches to the English Channel
- R. Pingree, P. Pugh, P. Holligan, G. Forster
- Environmental ScienceNature
- 1 December 1975
Tidal mixing on the continental shelf in the South-western Approaches to the English Channel produces a situation in the summer where within a few miles the warmer surface water becomes completely…
Molecular phylogenetics of the siphonophora (Cnidaria), with implications for the evolution of functional specialization.
- C. Dunn, P. Pugh, S. Haddock
- BiologySystematic Biology
- 1 December 2005
Maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses of morphological data suggest that the transition rate for decreased functional specialization is greater than the Transition rate for increased functional specialization for three out of the four investigated categories of polyps and medusae.
The spatial and temporal development of the spring phytoplankton bloom in the Celtic Sea, April 1979
- M. Fasham, P. Holligan, P. Pugh
- Environmental Science
- 1983
Bioluminescent and Red-Fluorescent Lures in a Deep-Sea Siphonophore
- S. Haddock, C. Dunn, P. Pugh, C. Schnitzler
- Environmental Science, BiologyScience
- 8 July 2005
A deep-sea siphonophore that twitches glowing lures to attract fish suggests that long-wavelength light plays a greater role in marine interactions than previously suspected.
Benthic siphonophores: a review of the family Rhodaliidae (Siphonophora, Physonectae)
- P. Pugh
- Biology
- 14 June 1983
It is conclusively proven that the rhodaliid species are unique among the siphonophores in that their habitat is not planktonic, as previous authors asserted, but benthic, and some of these are discussed.
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