All Stories

  1. Correction to: Evidence of multiple introductions and genetic admixture of the Asian brush-clawed shore crab Hemigrapsus takanoi (Decapoda: Brachyura: Varunidae) along the Northern European coast
  2. Understanding the stoichiometric limitation of herbivore growth: the importance of feeding and assimilation flexibilities
  3. Will Invertebrates Require Increasingly Carbon-Rich Food in a Warming World?
  4. Evidence of multiple introductions and genetic admixture of the Asian brush-clawed shore crab Hemigrapsus takanoi (Decapoda: Brachyura: Varunidae) along the Northern European coast
  5. The fauna of freshwater calanoid copepods in Japan in the early decades of the 21st Century: Implications for the assessment and conservation of biodiversity
  6. Erratum to: Reconstructing the Invasion History of the Asian shorecrab, Hemigrapsus sanguineus (De Haan 1835) in the Western Atlantic
  7. Ecological and genetic impact of the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami on intertidal mud snails
  8. Reconstructing the Invasion History of the Asian shorecrab, Hemigrapsus sanguineus (De Haan 1835) in the Western Atlantic
  9. Changes in epilithic fungal communities under different light conditions in a river: A field experimental study
  10. Variations in lignin-derived phenols in sediments of Japanese lakes over the last century and their relation to watershed vegetation
  11. pH as a key factor defining the niche space of the alpine crustacean speciesDaphnia tanakai
  12. Ecological Impacts of Tsunamis on Coastal Ecosystems
  13. Relative importance of physical and biological factors regulating tintinnid populations: a field study with frequent samplings in Sendai Bay, Japan
  14. Roles of Terrestrial Carbon Subsidies to Aquatic Community Metabolism in Mountain Lake Ecosystems
  15. Ecological Responses of Macrobenthic Communities in Tidal Flats to Disturbances by the Great East Japan Earthquake
  16. Genetic Structures of Laguncula pulchella Metapopulations Along the Northeast Coast of Japan After the Tsunamis Caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake
  17. Ⅰ-6. Ecological impacts of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami and the following recovery in tidal sand and mud flats
  18. Riparian land cover and land use effects on riverine epilithic fungal communities
  19. Life history traits and ecological conditions influencing the symbiotic relationship between the flatworm Stylochoplana pusilla and host snail Monodonta labio
  20. Couples that have chemistry: when ecological theories meet
  21. Cryptic diversity of Japanese Diaphanosoma (Crustacea: Cladocera) revealed by morphological and molecular assessments
  22. Invasion and molecular evolution ofDaphnia pulexin Japan
  23. Historical Changes in the Ecosystem Condition of a Small Mountain Lake over the Past 60 Years as Revealed by Plankton Remains and Daphnia Ephippial Carapaces Stored in Lake Sediments
  24. Usefulness of the size of dark spots on the body surface as a diagnostic character distinguishing two morphologically similar Hemigrapsus species (Decapoda: Brachyura: Varunidae)
  25. Spatial and seasonal changes in species diversity of epilithic fungi along environmental gradients of a river
  26. Host preference of a symbiotic flatworm in relation to the ecology of littoral snails
  27. Ecological impacts of the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami on aquatic animals in rice paddies
  28. An experimental test of the ability of Daphnia galeata resting egg production in Lake Biwa
  29. Characterization and cross-species utility of polymorphic microsatellite markers in the Asian mud snails Batillaria attramentaria and B. multiformis
  30. Ecological stoichiometry: An elementary approach using basic principles
  31. Correction: Immediate Ecological Impacts of the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami on Intertidal Flat Communities
  32. Immediate Ecological Impacts of the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake Tsunami on Intertidal Flat Communities
  33. Fluvial transport of carbon along the river-to-ocean continuum and its potential impacts on a brackish water food web in the Iwaki River watershed, northern Japan
  34. Finding copepod footprints: a protocol for molecular identification of diapausing eggs in lake sediments
  35. Sedimentary records of metal deposition in Japanese alpine lakes for the last 250years: Recent enrichment of airborne Sb and In in East Asia
  36. Eutrophication, Warming and Historical Changes of the Plankton Community in Lake Biwa during the Twentieth Century
  37. Eutrophication of mountain lakes in Japan due to increasing deposition of anthropogenically produced dust
  38. DNA extraction and amplification methods for ephippial cases of Daphnia resting eggs in lake sediments: a novel approach for reconstructing zooplankton population structure from the past
  39. Food quality and food threshold: implications of food stoichiometry to competitive ability of herbivore plankton
  40. Competitive outcomes between herbivorous consumers can be predicted from their stoichiometric demands
  41. Discrepancy between conventional morphological systematics and nuclear phylogeny of tintinnids (Ciliophora: Choreotrichia)
  42. Dissolved Organic Carbon as Major Environmental Factor Affecting Bacterioplankton Communities in Mountain Lakes of Eastern Japan
  43. Optimal feeding under stoichiometric constraints: a model of compensatory feeding with functional response
  44. The long-term consequences of hybridization between the two Daphnia species, D. galeata and D. dentifera, in mature habitats
  45. Stoichiometric effects of warming on herbivore growth: experimental test with plankters
  46. Within-lake and watershed determinants of carbon dioxide in surface water: A comparative analysis of a variety of lakes in the Japanese Islands
  47. Potential role of fungi in plankton food web functioning and stability: a simulation analysis based on Lake Biwa inverse model
  48. The evolution of biological stoichiometry under global change
  49. Effects of Drainage-Basin Geomorphology on Insectivorous Bird Abundance in Temperate Forests
  50. Phosphorus acquisition and competitive abilities of two herbivorous zooplankton, Daphnia pulex and Ceriodaphnia quadrangula
  51. Spatial variations in chironomid larvae and dragonfly predation in pools on a Japanese high mountain moor
  52. Phytoplankton dynamics in Lake Biwa during the 20th century: complex responses to climate variation and changes in nutrient status
  53. Mitigation of adverse effects of rising CO2on a planktonic herbivore by mixed algal diets
  54. Sedimentary records of reduction in resting egg production of Daphnia galeata in Lake Biwa during the 20th century: a possible effect of winter warming
  55. Changes in stable isotopes, lignin-derived phenols, and fossil pigments in sediments of Lake Biwa, Japan: Implications for anthropogenic effects over the last 100 years
  56. Effects of Protoceratium reticulatum yessotoxin on feeding rates of Acartia hudsonica: A bioassay using artificial particles coated with purified toxin
  57. Scale‐dependent carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus seston stoichiometry in marine and freshwaters
  58. Regulation of phosphorus stoichiometry and growth rate of consumers: theoretical and experimental analyses with Daphnia
  59. Role of phytoplankton size distribution in lake ecosystems revealed by a comparison of whole plankton community structure between Lake Baikal and Lake Biwa
  60. Effects of temporal and spatial heterogeneities created by consumer-driven nutrient recycling on algal diversity
  61. To sink or to be lysed? Contrasting fate of two large phytoplankton species in Lake Biwa
  62. Carbon steady-state model of the planktonic food web of Lake Biwa, Japan
  63. Ontogenetic changes in vertical distribution of an endemic amphipod, Jesogammarus annandalei, in Lake Biwa, Japan
  64. Genotype × environment interactions, stoichiometric food quality effects, and clonal coexistence in Daphnia pulex
  65. The production-to-respiration ratio and its implication in Lake Biwa, Japan
  66. Metabolic Stoichiometry and the Fate of Excess Carbon and Nutrients in Consumers
  67. Long-term changes in the abundance of Jesogammarus annandalei (Tattersall) in Lake Biwa
  68. Assessment of ‘top‐down’ and ‘bottom‐up’ forces as determinants of rotifer distribution among lakes in Ontario, Canada
  69. Effect of temperature and light on growth of planktic green algae isolated from Lake Hövsgöl, Mongolia
  70. Direct Analysis of Lipids in Single Zooplankter Individuals by Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectrometry
  71. Fluctuation of the zooplankton community in Lake Biwa during the 20th century: a paleolimnological analysis
  72. Stoichiometric impacts of increased carbon dioxide on a planktonic herbivore
  73. Bacterioplankton production in a water column of Lake Biwa
  74. Role of Daphnia in the decomposition of organic matter in the surface layer of Lake Biwa
  75. Direct and indirect effects of zooplankton on algal composition in in situ grazing experiments
  76. The influence of fluctuating light intensities on species composition and diversity of natural phytoplankton communities
  77. Population dynamics and production of Jesogammarus annandalei, an endemic amphipod, in Lake Biwa, Japan
  78. Food quality determinants for Daphnia growth in P-limited lakes
  79. Mortality of the planktonic desmid, Staurastrum dorsidentiferum, due to interplay of fungal parasitism and low light conditions
  80. Herbivorous animals can mitigate unfavourable ratios of energy and material supplies by enhancing nutrient recycling
  81. Evidence of phosphorus‐limited individual and population growth of Daphnia in a Canadian Shield lake
  82. Contrasting effects of a cladoceran (Daphnia galeata) and a calanoid copepod (Eodiaptomus japonicus) on algal and microbial plankton in a Japanese lake, Lake Biwa
  83. Nutrient Limitation Reduces Food Quality for Zooplankton: Daphnia Response to Seston Phosphorus Enrichment
  84. NUTRIENT LIMITATION REDUCES FOOD QUALITY FOR ZOOPLANKTON:DAPHNIARESPONSE TO SESTON PHOSPHORUS ENRICHMENT
  85. Seasonal and vertical difference in negative and positive effects of grazers on heterotrophic bacteria in Lake Biwa
  86. Diel changes in phagotrophy by Cryptomonas in Lake Biwa
  87. Light, nutrients and primary productivity in Lake Biwa: An evaluation of the current ecosystem situation
  88. The Stoichiometry of Consumer-Driven Nutrient Recycling: Theory, Observations, and Consequences
  89. THE STOICHIOMETRY OF CONSUMER-DRIVEN NUTRIENT RECYCLING: THEORY, OBSERVATIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES
  90. Length?weight relationships of eight freshwater planktonic crustacean species in Japan
  91. Phosphorus limitation ofDaphniagrowth: Is it real?
  92. Population Dynamics of Planktonic Crustacea Studied during BITEX'93
  93. Grazing and Food Size Selection of Zooplankton Community in Lake Biwa during BITEX '93.
  94. Contribution of metazoan plankton to the cycling of nitrogen and phosphorus in Lake Biwa
  95. Direct and indirect effects of zooplankton on seston stoichiometry
  96. Effect of a Zooplankton Community on Seston Elimination in a Restored Pond in Japan
  97. N and P Cycling Coupled by Grazers' Activities: Food Quality and Nutrient Release by Zooplankton
  98. Implications of sestonic elemental ratio in zooplankton ecology: Reply to the comment by Brett
  99. Possibility of N or P limitation for planktonic cladocerans: An experimental test
  100. Midsummer succession of rotifer plankton in a shallow eutrophic pond
  101. Effect of food conditions on the bacterial feeding of Daphnia galeata
  102. Effect of food concentration on the carbon balance of Bosmina longirostris (Crustacea: Cladocera)
  103. Effect of food concentration on growth, reproduction and survivorship of Bosmina longirostris (Cladocera).
  104. Effect of food conditions on the bacterial feeding of Daphnia galeata
  105. Stable horizontal variation in the zooplankton community structure of a reservoir maintained by predation and competition
  106. Influence of food density on respiration rate of two crustacean plankters, Daphnia galeata and Bosmina longirostris
  107. Relative importance of temporal and spatial heterogeneity in the zooplankton community of an artificial reservoir
  108. The production-to-respiration ratio and its implication in Lake Biwa, Japan
  109. Terrestrial Ecosystems in Monsoon Asia: Scaling up from Shoot Module to Watershed