Author/Authors :
Ishitani، نويسنده , , Yoshiyuki and Takahashi، نويسنده , , Kozo، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Geographic and vertical distribution patterns of living Radiolaria are closely related to the characters of the water column. We studied living Radiolaria in samples collected at closely spaced depth intervals in the waters surrounding Japan in order to understand their vertical distribution and its controlling factors. Such information is needed to reconstruct past vertical water mass structure. The Japanese Islands are surrounded by the marginal Japan Sea and the North Pacific Ocean, and from approximately 46° N to 26° N. They thus extend across a large latitudinal range and are exposed to a similarly wide range of environmental conditions, inducing the warm Kuroshio, Tsushima, and Tsugaru Currents and the cold Oyashio Current.
formed plankton tows (mesh size 63 mm) from late May to early June 2002 at eight sites, sampling the upper 200 m of the water column, at seven depth intervals.
ognized five radiolarian assemblages: the Upper Surface Assemblage (0–40 m), the Lower Surface Assemblage (40–80 m), the Surface Assemblage (0–80 m), the Subsurface Assemblage (80–200 m), and the Lower Surface–Subsurface Assemblage (40–200 m) groups. Pseudodictyophimus gracilipes and Tetrapyle octacantha (juvenile) show “tropical submergence”, i.e. they live at the surface in high latitudes and at greater depth in low latitudes. Four taxa live at specific temperature and salinity: Acrosphaera spinosa, Larcopyle butschlii, Challengeron diodon, and Stichocorys seriata. Four taxa are associated with characteristic temperatures: Neosemantis distephanus, Arachnocorys umbellifura, Antarctissa sp. 1, and Saccospyris conithorax.
Keywords :
Around Japan , Radiolaria , Tropical submergence , Vertical geographic