All Stories

  1. Growth in the northern stone crab Lithodes maja Linnaeus, 1758 (Decapoda: Anomura: Lithodidae), a potential fishery target, in the laboratory
  2. The effect of high hydrostatic pressure acclimation on acute temperature tolerance and phospholipid fatty acid composition in the shallow-water shrimp Palaemon varians
  3. Prospects for metazoan life in sub-glacial Antarctic lakes: the most extreme life on Earth?
  4. Temperature adaptation in larval development of lithodine crabs from deep-water lineages
  5. Temperature effects on larval development in the lithodid crab Lithodes maja
  6. Recovery of Holothuroidea population density, community composition, and respiration activity after a deep-sea disturbance experiment
  7. Variability in hydrostatic pressure tolerance between Palaemon species: Implications for insights into the colonisation of the deep sea
  8. Metabolic rates are significantly lower in abyssal Holothuroidea than in shallow-water Holothuroidea
  9. NMDA Receptor Regulation Is Involved in the Limitation of Physiological Tolerance to Both Low Temperature and High Hydrostatic Pressure
  10. Ecotoxicological responses to chalcopyrite exposure in a proxy for deep-sea hydrothermal vent shrimp: implications for seafloor massive sulphide mining
  11. Identifying Toxic Impacts of Metals Potentially Released during Deep-Sea Mining—A Synthesis of the Challenges to Quantifying Risk
  12. Climate change and the threat of novel marine predators in Antarctica
  13. Hydrostatic pressure and temperature affect the tolerance of the free-living marine nematode Halomonhystera disjuncta to acute copper exposure
  14. Metabolic costs imposed by hydrostatic pressure constrain bathymetric range in the lithodid crabLithodes maja
  15. A comparative experimental approach to ecotoxicology in shallow-water and deep-sea holothurians suggests similar behavioural responses
  16. The Effects of Temperature and Hydrostatic Pressure on Metal Toxicity: Insights into Toxicity in the Deep Sea
  17. Resilience of benthic deep-sea fauna to mining activities
  18. Report on the Managing Impacts of Deep-seA reSource exploitation (MIDAS) workshop on environmental management of deep-sea mining
  19. The potential for climate-driven bathymetric range shifts: sustained temperature and pressure exposures on a marine ectotherm,Palaemonetes varians
  20. The role of ontogeny in physiological tolerance: decreasing hydrostatic pressure tolerance with development in the northern stone crab Lithodes maja : Figure 1.
  21. In situobservations of a possible skate nursery off the western Antarctic Peninsula
  22. The metabolic cost of developing under hydrostatic pressure: experimental evidence supports macroecological pattern
  23. The effects of changing climate on faunal depth distributions determine winners and losers
  24. Discovery of a recent, natural whale fall on the continental slope off Anvers Island, western Antarctic Peninsula
  25. The effects of temperature and pressure acclimation on the temperature and pressure tolerance of the shallow-water shrimp Palaemonetes varians
  26. Explaining bathymetric diversity patterns in marine benthic invertebrates and demersal fishes: physiological contributions to adaptation of life at depth
  27. Thermal adaptations in deep-sea hydrothermal vent and shallow-water shrimp
  28. Temperature and pressure tolerance of larvae of Crepidula fornicata suggest thermal limitation of bathymetric range
  29. Sustained hydrostatic pressure tolerance of the shallow water shrimp Palaemonetes varians at different temperatures: Insights into the colonisation of the deep sea
  30. Respiratory Response of the Deep-Sea Amphipod Stephonyx biscayensis Indicates Bathymetric Range Limitation by Temperature and Hydrostatic Pressure
  31. Pressure tolerance of the shallow-water caridean shrimp Palaemonetes varians across its thermal tolerance window
  32. Metabolic rate and growth in the temperate bivalve Mercenaria mercenaria at a biogeographical limit, from the English Channel—ERRATUM
  33. Metabolic rate and growth in the temperate bivalve Mercenaria mercenaria at a biogeographical limit, from the English Channel
  34. THE MACROBENTHIC ECOLOGY OF THE STRAITS OF MAGELLAN AND THE BEAGLE CHANNEL