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Dive into the research topics where Cornelia Buchholz is active.

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Featured researches published by Cornelia Buchholz.


European Journal of Phycology | 2008

The genus Laminaria sensu lato : recent insights and developments

Inka Bartsch; Christian Wiencke; Kai Bischof; Cornelia Buchholz; Bela H. Buck; Anja Eggert; Peter Feuerpfeil; Dieter Hanelt; Sabine Jacobsen; Rolf Karez; Ulf Karsten; Markus Molis; Michael Y. Roleda; Hendrik Schubert; Rhena Schumann; Klaus Valentin; Florian Weinberger; Jutta Wiese

This review about the genus Laminaria sensu lato summarizes the extensive literature that has been published since the overview of the genus given by Kain in 1979. The recent proposal to divide the genus into the two genera Laminaria and Saccharina is acknowledged, but the published data are discussed under a ‘sensu lato’ concept, introduced here. This includes all species which have been considered to be ‘Laminaria’ before the division of the genus. In detail, after an introduction the review covers recent insights into phylogeny and taxonomy, and discusses morphotypes, ecotypes, population genetics and demography. It describes growth and photosynthetic performance of sporophytes with special paragraphs on the regulation of sporogenesis, regulation by endogenous rhythms, nutrient metabolism, storage products, and salinity tolerance. The biology of microstages is discussed separately. The ecology of these kelps is described with a focus on stress defence against abiotic and biotic factors and the role of Laminaria as habitat, its trophic interactions and its competition is discussed. Finally, recent developments in aquaculture are summarized. In conclusion to each section, as a perspective and guide to future research, we draw attention to the remaining gaps in the knowledge about the genus and kelps in general.


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2004

The offshore-ring: A new system design for the open ocean aquaculture of macroalgae

Bela H. Buck; Cornelia Buchholz

Mass culture of benthic macroalgae under rough offshore conditions in the North Sea requires rigid culture support systems that cannot only withstand rough weather conditions but can also be effectively handled while at the same time retain the cultured species. Various carrier constructions and different mooring systems were tested. Laminaria saccharina grew on all of these carriers with initially high (up to 14.5% per day) and later decreasing length increments. Longlines, ladder and grid systems had certain disadvantages and these are discussed. The study results led to a new ring carrier (patent pending), first used in 1994/1995, which was gradually improved until 2002. This system now emerges as being superior, since it resists not only rough weather conditions (2 m s−1 current velocity, 6 m wave height) but also permits ease of handling when compared to other constructions. The ring allows various operational modes and can be equipped with culture lines that can be collected offshore or transported to shore facilities for harvesting. The modular nature of the tested ring system lends itself for future use in integrated aquaculture systems located in or attached to offshore wind farms.


Helgoland Marine Research | 1995

Diel vertical migrations ofMeganyctiphanes norvegica in the Kattegat: Comparison of net catches and measurements with Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers

Friedrich Buchholz; Cornelia Buchholz; J. Reppin; J. Fischer

Diel vertical migration of a stable and well-defined population of Nordic krill,Meganyctiphanes norvegica (Crustacea, Euphausiacea) was investigated during eight days in August 1989, in the Läsö-Deep, East of the Danish island Läsö. Net catches with a multi-net (MOCNESS) and measurements with a moored and a shipboard Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP) were compared. Backscattered energy as a measure for biomass gave good correlations to the dry weight ofM. norvegica and smaller zooplankton from net catches. Diel migratory patterns matched well, as determined, parallel with both methods. Migratory vertical velocity was determined with ADCP at 2–3 cm sec−1. The potential for the use of ADCPs for biological investigation is discussed. Vertical migration was dependent on environmental parameters. The krill did not cross a temperature barrier of 14°C, although rich food sources were situated beyond it. Differences in salinity did not play a role. Currents were involved in plankton distribution. Light was an important Zeitgeber (synchronizer) and determined the density of the krill aggregations. Feeding behaviour did not interfere with the light-induced migratory pattern of Nordic krill at the Läsö-Deep.


Marine Biology | 1989

Ultrastructure of the integument of a pelagic Crustacean: moult cycle related studies on the Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba

Cornelia Buchholz; Friedrich Buchholz

The ultrastructure of euphausiid integument was examined in relation to the moult cycle and supplemented by investigations of chitinase activity in the integument and content of N-acetyl-β-D-glucosamine in the hemolymph. The Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba was collected in 1983 in Admiralty Bay, King George Island, Antarctica. Some specimens of the Northern krill, Meganyctiphanes norvegica, from the Danish Kattegat served for comparison. As a major aim of the study, the moult staging system developed for living tissue could be verified by ultrastructural findings. Under experimental high production conditions of the Antarctic summer, no period of rest or “intermoult” between post- and premoult was observed in subadult E. superba. Neither was a resting phase seen at the cellular level, the epidermis remained active. The epidermal gland cells did not show any cyclical changes, and the organelles of protein synthesis were generally well developed in all moult stages. In order to follow the physiological course of events, structural and biochemical methods were combined and showed as a result that the last moult stage before ecdysis is characterized by massive cuticular resorption. The epicuticle remained ultrastructurally unchanged before and after ecdysis, even though its permeability should alter at ecdysis. The existence of muscle insertions which connect the old and the new cuticle across the exuvial space suggests an answer to the question why E. superba is hardly impaired in swimming almost up to the time of ecdysis.


EPIC3Seaweed Biology: Novel Insights into Ecophysiology, Ecology and Utilization, Seaweed Biology: Novel Insights into Ecophysiology, Ecology and Utilization, Heidelberg, Berlin, Springer, 509 p., pp. 471-493, ISBN: 978-3642284502 | 2012

Seaweed and Man

Cornelia Buchholz; Gesche Krause; Bela H. Buck

Seaweeds have been utilized by man as food and medication for about 14,000 years. The ever rising demand for edible seaweeds and for biochemical components of seaweeds, mainly hydrocolloids like agar, alginate, and carrageenan, has fuelled a large aquaculture industry particularly in Asia. Future expansion of seaweed culture will include suitable farming sites in offshore areas associated with wind farms. Seaweeds as extractive and therefore bioremedial species are moreover an important component in Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture (IMTA), where commercially valuable organisms of different trophic levels are combined in a culturing system resembling a small ecosystem. The employment created by seaweeds and other aquaculture secures an income to millions of people and is therefore of high socioeconomic importance.


Journal of Applied Phycology | 1999

Isolated, distal blade discs of the brown alga Laminaria digitata form sorus, but not discs, near to the meristematic transition zone

Cornelia Buchholz; Klaus Lüning

Blade discs of vegetative thalli of Laminaria digitata (Huds.) Lamour. from Helgoland (North Sea) cut at 5–15 cm distance from the blade/stipe transition, formed sorus in the laboratory after 7–12weeks, 5 months earlier than whole fronds in the field. Sorus formation occurred in a broad range of daylength regimes or temperatures, at 8–16 h light pe rday and 6–12 °C. No sorus was developed during three months by meristematic blade discs cut from the lowermost 3 cm portion of the blade, nor from whole thalli cultured in parallel to isolated blade discs. These findings point to the possible existence of sporulation inhibitors produced by the laminarian meristem.


Journal of Phycology | 2000

EVIDENCE FOR INHIBITORS OF SPORANGIUM FORMATION IN LAMINARIA DIGITATA (PHAEOPHYCEAE) DURING THE SEASON OF RAPID GROWTH

Andreas Wagner; Cornelia Buchholz

The pathway from the intercalary frond meristem to distal frond portions was blocked in experimental sporophytes of Laminaria digitata (Huds.) Lamour. in January by cutting 2 or 3 holes (15–25 mm diameter) 5 cm from the base of the frond. This procedure resulted in the formation of sori adjacent to the distal edge of the holes within 5–10 weeks. Frond portions that were cut at least 20 cm away from the stipe–frond transition readily formed sori within 5–7 weeks after isolation from the rest of the thallus. These findings suggest that the basal actively dividing and expanding part of the laminarian frond is the source of inhibitors of sporangium formation that move in a distal direction and keep the young frond free of sori during the season of rapid growth (i.e. during the first part of the year). The natural occurrence of sori during the season of slow growth (i.e. the second part of the year in the Northern Hemisphere) may be due to reduced synthesis and export of inhibitors of sporangium formation from the more or less resting basal meristem.


Polar Biology | 2012

First observation of krill spawning in the high Arctic Kongsfjorden, west Spitsbergen

Friedrich Buchholz; Thorsten Werner; Cornelia Buchholz

In the past, two euphausiid species prevailed in the high Arctic Kongsfjorden, the arcto-boreal Thysanoessa inermis (Kroeyer, 1846) and Thysanoessa raschii (Sars. 1964). Both were considered expatriates from the Barents Sea or Norwegian Sea and non-reproductive due to low temperatures. The macro-zooplankton of the fjord has been studied as a component in an ecosystem context since 2006, including baseline investigation of distribution and functional performance of key species. In recent years, three additional krill species were regularly detected in the fjord and are the focus of an intensive long-term study. Of these species, Thysanoessa longicaudata (Kroeyer, 1846) and Meganyctiphanes norvegica (Sars, 1857) are typical for the boreal Atlantic whereas Nematoscelis megalops (Sars, 1883) has a broad distribution in temperate to subtropical provinces. Their occurrence in the Kongsfjorden clearly indicates increasing Atlantic influence. During the 2011 campaign, T. raschii was observed spawning in the field for the first time and showed development up to the naupliar stage in the laboratory. Should more evidence of reproduction be encountered in any of the five krill species in the Kongsfjorden in the future, it will be taken as an indication of a changing environment concerning temperature and food web composition.


Advances in Marine Biology | 2010

Growth and moulting in Northern krill (Meganyctiphanes norvegica Sars).

Friedrich Buchholz; Cornelia Buchholz

Moulting and growth as a key aspect of the life-history of crustaceans has been reviewed here for Meganyctiphanes norvegica. Moulting is a cyclical process with relatively constrained, uniform phases that have been well documented. The crustacean moult cycle has a large influence on growth-rates, reproduction and metabolism. Moult and growth are under hormonal control with further environmental influences. A pre-requisite for intensive studies is a detailed moult staging system. Here, a further refinement and temporal phasing is presented for M. norvegica. On such a basis, the dynamics of cuticle synthesis and degradation are shown. Moult and reproductive cycles are interlinked and krill is able to combine growth and reproduction in a way that allows females to achieve similar net growth rates to males. A synchronisation of physiological processes and behaviour related to growth and reproduction enhances environmental success. Moult staging can also be used to assess growth rates in the field. Some further technical approaches are reviewed. Laboratory maintenance and field data are combined to determine growth rates under various environmental conditions. These are related to life-growth assessments from population studies comparing krill along a latitudinal gradient. Life-cycle and physiological data indicate that Northern krill are able to cope with both warm and cold environments and have highly adaptable phenotypes. The species may serve as useful indicator of environmental change. Its potential proliferation in new environments may also have implications to regional food webs, given the krills high level of growth and productivity and their pivotal trophic role.


EPIC3Faszination Meeresforschung, Book, Berlin, Springer, 573 p., pp. 455-460, ISBN: 978-3-662-49713-5 | 2017

Sushi und die Algenfarmen

Cornelia Buchholz; Bela H. Buck

Fast die Halfte der weltweit durch Marikultur erzeugten Biomasse sind Makroalgen. Die unterschiedlich gelierenden Bestandteile ihrer Zellwande (Hydrokolloide) werden industriell genutzt. Offensichtlicher fur den Verbraucher ist die Verwendung als Lebensmittel, z.B. die Rotalge Pyropia als Nori fur Sushi. Es wird erklart, warum diese Produkte teuer sind.

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Friedrich Buchholz

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Bela H. Buck

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Christian Wiencke

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Inka Bartsch

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Thorsten Werner

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Harald Asmus

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Lars Gutow

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Ragnhild Asmus

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Benoit Lebreton

University of La Rochelle

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