Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. More information

Difference between revisions of "Oellermann 2014 Thesis"

From Bioblast
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Publication
{{Publication
|title=Oellermann M (2014) Blue Blood on Ice: cephalopod haemocyanin function and evolution in a latitudinal cline. PhD Thesis 1-213.
|title=Oellermann M (2014) Blue Blood on Ice: cephalopod haemocyanin function and evolution in a latitudinal cline. PhD Thesis 1-213.
|info=[http://elib.suub.uni-bremen.de/edocs/00104376-1.pdf Open Access]
|authors=Oellermann M
|authors=Oellermann M
|year=2015
|year=2015
|journal=PhD Thesis
|journal=PhD Thesis University Bremen
|abstract=The Antarctic Ocean hosts a rich and diverse fauna despite inhospitable temperatures close to freezing, which require specialist adaptations to sustain animal activity and various underlying body functions. While oxygen transport plays a key role in setting thermal tolerance in warmer climates, this constraint is relaxed in Antarctic fishes and crustaceans, due to high levels of dissolved oxygen. Less is known about how other Antarctic ectotherms cope with temperatures near zero, particularly the more active invertebrates like the abundant octopods. A continued reliance on the highly specialised blood oxygen transport system of cephalopods may concur with functional constraints at cold temperatures. We therefore analysed the octopod’s central oxygen transport component, the blue blood pigment haemocyanin, to unravel strategies that sustain oxygen supply and thus survival at cold temperatures.
|abstract=The Antarctic Ocean hosts a rich and diverse fauna despite inhospitable temperatures close to freezing, which require specialist adaptations to sustain animal activity and various underlying body functions. While oxygen transport plays a key role in setting thermal tolerance in warmer climates, this constraint is relaxed in Antarctic fishes and crustaceans, due to high levels of dissolved oxygen. Less is known about how other Antarctic ectotherms cope with temperatures near zero, particularly the more active invertebrates like the abundant octopods. A continued reliance on the highly specialised blood oxygen transport system of cephalopods may concur with functional constraints at cold temperatures. We therefore analysed the octopod’s central oxygen transport component, the blue blood pigment haemocyanin, to unravel strategies that sustain oxygen supply and thus survival at cold temperatures.
|mipnetlab=DE Bremerhaven Mark FC
|mipnetlab=DE Bremerhaven Mark FC

Revision as of 09:43, 13 October 2015

Publications in the MiPMap
Oellermann M (2014) Blue Blood on Ice: cephalopod haemocyanin function and evolution in a latitudinal cline. PhD Thesis 1-213.

» Open Access

Oellermann M (2015) PhD Thesis University Bremen

Abstract: The Antarctic Ocean hosts a rich and diverse fauna despite inhospitable temperatures close to freezing, which require specialist adaptations to sustain animal activity and various underlying body functions. While oxygen transport plays a key role in setting thermal tolerance in warmer climates, this constraint is relaxed in Antarctic fishes and crustaceans, due to high levels of dissolved oxygen. Less is known about how other Antarctic ectotherms cope with temperatures near zero, particularly the more active invertebrates like the abundant octopods. A continued reliance on the highly specialised blood oxygen transport system of cephalopods may concur with functional constraints at cold temperatures. We therefore analysed the octopod’s central oxygen transport component, the blue blood pigment haemocyanin, to unravel strategies that sustain oxygen supply and thus survival at cold temperatures.


O2k-Network Lab: DE Bremerhaven Mark FC


Labels: MiParea: Respiration, Comparative MiP;environmental MiP 

Stress:Temperature 




HRR: Oxygraph-2k