Hein von Westernhagen
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research
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Featured researches published by Hein von Westernhagen.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1988
Hein von Westernhagen; V. Dethlefsen; P. Cameron; J. Berg; G. Fürstenberg
In February/March 1983 and 1984 a survey of pelagic fish eggs was conducted in the western Baltic (Kiel Bight), employing a horizontally towed plankton net (1 m Ø and 300 μm mesh). Maximum egg numbers in the upper meter of the S=21×10−3 salinity layer were 200·100 m−3. The most abundant eggs were cod (up to 142 eggs·100 m−3), followed by plaice (up to 74 eggs·100 m−3) and flounder (20 eggs·100 m−3). A considerable percentage of embryos of all species displayed aberrant development. In 1983 18% of cod, 22% of flounder and 24% of plaice eggs caught contained defective embryos; in 1984 this number was larger, ranging from 28% in plaice over 32% in cod to 44% in flounder. Early developmental stages showed the highest malformation rates (up to 51% in the case of early flounder embryos). With progressive development, malformations decreased in numbers, being lowest prior to hatching. Highest rates of malformations were recorded in the Mecklenburg Bight in 1983. A second area with high incidence of malformation rates was located south and east of the island of Langeland. Several reasons, including environmental and anthropogenic factors, for the occurrence of malformed embryos in pelagic fish eggs are discussed. The potential of malformation rates in embryos of pelagic fish eggs as a tool for monitoring is considered.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1989
Hein von Westernhagen; P. Cameron; V. Dethlefsen; D. Janssen
Artificially inseminated eggs of feral North Sea whiting (Merlangius merlangus) were incubated in the laboratory in order to determine reproductive success. After incubation, two measures for reproductive success, total hatch and viable hatch, were determined and correlated with chlorinated hydrocarbon residues in the respective ovaries. From their specific toxicities and the sum of all determined chlorinated hydrocarbon contaminants, a contamination factor (CF) was calculated. Significant negative correlations were found between total hatch and DDT, including its metabolites (ΣDDT), dieldrin and the CF. ΣDDT and the CF were also negatively correlated with viable hatch. A threshold value of ovary contamination above which impairment of reproductive success was likely to occur was set at > 200 μg kg−1 wet wt. for ΣPCB, > 20 μg kg−1 wet wt. for ΣDDT and > 10 μg kg−1 wet wt. for dieldrin.
Marine Environmental Research | 2002
Katja Broeg; Angela Köhler; Hein von Westernhagen
From 1995 to 2000 biological effects were studied in liver of flounder (Platichtysflesus L.) from the German Bight. During the study period deleterious consequences of acute discharges of DDT and PCBs in early spring 1996 and after 1998 due to remobilization of contaminants from riverbed deepening of the River Elbe became evident. As core biomarker which reflects toxically induced liver pathologies and integrates effects of various classes of pollutants we measured the integrity of lysosomal membranes in individual flounder liver. During the study period, twice statistically significant disturbances of lysosomal function was detected in fish from the River Elbe: in summer 1996 and in spring 1999. Yet, the detrimental contaminant effects were not only restricted to individuals from the Elbe but expanded to those flounder inhabiting formerly less polluted reference areas. In contrast to flounder of the Elbe, their ability to recover from the lysosomal disorders were limited. While in autumn 2000 Elbe individuals showed clear signs of recovery, those fish caught in areas more distant to the source of toxicant input still maintained significantly decreased lysosomal membrane integrity. It can be speculated that fish populations which are not continuously exposed to chronic anthropogenic stress may have a lower potential or need a longer period to recover from the effects of pollution.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1999
Günter Krüner; Hein von Westernhagen
Abstract The paper describes the technical, procedural and biological aspects of 7-ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD) activity measurements in dab, Limanda limanda, from the North Sea. Several sources of measurement error in assays of EROD activity measurements for biological effects monitoring exercises could be defined, particularly for assay conditions, sample storage and sampling. In addition to variability caused by technical errors, biological features inherent in the surveyed fish may lead to even more severe errors in EROD activity measurements. This is particularly true of the choice of sampling time. Disregarding the species-specific spawning periods may lead to a loss of activity by a factor of as much as 90 in females and 40 in males, thus making it necessary to design sampling surveys appropriately.
Helgoland Marine Research | 2003
Birte Matthiessen; H. O. Fock; Hein von Westernhagen
About 202 specimens of snipefishes (Macroramphosus spp.) from Great Meteor Seamount (GMR, subtropical NE Atlantic, 30°N, 28.5°W) were analysed with respect to diet composition and morphology. Fifty specimens belonged to the deep-bodied benthos-feeding type (b-type) whose diet consisted of foraminifers, pteropods, decapods and polychaetes, whereas the slender planktivorous individuals (p-type, n=140) mainly fed on ostracods, copepods, pteropods and foraminifers. Twelve specimens showed no specialisation with respect to feeding (p/b-type). Both feeding types can be significantly distinguished from each other by means of bi- and multivariate morphological analysis considering the variables body depth, length of second dorsal spine, diameter of orbit and standard length. We discuss the hypothesis that M. gracilis represents a transient juvenile stage of M. scolopax. Since our specimens of the M. gracilis type were larger than specimens of the M. scolopax-type, such an ontogenetic shift is unlikely to occur. Our results support the hypothesis of Clarke for Australian snipefishes that for Macroramphosus spp. locally two distinct sympatric species must be anticipated, corresponding to M. scolopax and M. gracilis and the b- and p-types, respectively.
Helgoland Marine Research | 2002
Hein von Westernhagen; V. Dethlefsen; Tim Bade; Werner Wosniok
Abstract. The occurrence and abundance of the pelagic eggs of southern North Sea spring-spawning fish were analysed between 1984 and 2000. Species number varied between six (1986) and 14 (1999) and was positively correlated with sea surface temperature. With one exception, dab eggs were always the most abundant and usually highly dominant. Ranking of species depended on temperature, but no significant differences in ranking between years was discernible. Although with the increase in temperature in the 1990s a change in species assemblage was evident [species belonging to the boreal-Mediterranean (Lusitanian) group became more apparent in the species assemblage] this did not lead to an increased species diversity (Shannon Index) or a change in other community parameters. It appears that the recent developments regarding spawning stock biomass of commercial North Sea fish is reflected in the declining egg abundance of the respective commercial and larger species (i.e. cod, flounder, plaice) and an increase in abundance of the eggs of small species (i.e. long rough dab, rockling) over the years.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1999
Hein von Westernhagen; Günter Krüner; Katja Broeg
Abstract. Ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD) activity was measured in the liver of dab (Limanda limanda) and flounder (Platichthys flesus) from the German Bight (southern North Sea) and compared with muscle and liver polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) concentrations in an attempt to relate EROD activity to PCB body burden. In none of the different datasets (species-, tissue- or matrix-dependent) was a significant (P<0.05) correlation between PCB tissue contamination and EROD activity found. Yet EROD activity was significantly correlated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) levels (phenanthrene, fluoranthene, pyrene) in muscle tissue, indicating a possible dependence of EROD expression on other ubiquitous organic contaminants, thus making it a suitable biomarker for general pollution.
Helgoland Marine Research | 2003
Eran Gefen; Lewi Stone; Michael Rosenfeld; Hein von Westernhagen
We perform a statistical analysis of ecological data collected in the MARS project from marine environments of the Red and Mediterranean Seas in Israel, and the North Sea in Germany. In the study of fish parasite data, we examine the basic premise that the complex host lifecycles of heteroxenous (h) parasites make them more sensitive to pollution than monoxenous (m) parasites which have only one host. Unlike results from analyses of earlier survey data, we find that the pooled h/m index for a community is not a clear indicator of environmental stress as originally hypothesized. This is due to the relatively large seasonal variability at the sampling sites over the course of the 3-year survey. Other possible indicators for water pollution gradients are checked, including species richness, diversity and prevalence of parasite populations. A theoretical model of host-parasite population dynamics that makes the presence of ecological thresholds transparent is offered to help explain the abrupt transitions prominent in the distributions of parasites at different sites under different pollution loadings. Heavy metal and chlorinated hydrocarbon data collected from fish tissue samples and molluscs of the three seas are assessed as bioindicators for pollution monitoring. The xenobiotic loads and indices of defence system activity and tissue damage are shown to have great potential as monitoring bioindicators.
Helgoland Marine Research | 2003
Ariel Diamant; Hein von Westernhagen
The present issue presents the outcome of the GermanIsraeli cooperative project in Marine Sciences (MARS) ‘Biological Effects Monitoring’ as an integral part of the agreement on scientific research and technological development between the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Israel Ministry of Science, Culture and Sport (MOS). Both phases, MARS 1 (1995–1998) and MARS 2 (1998–2001) were sponsored and coordinated by the BMBF through its project management group (Projekttr ger BEO) and the GKSS Research Center, Geesthacht GmbH. MARS dealt with the application of potential biological effects monitoring methods (MARS 1/1–3 and MARS 2/1–2 and MARS Statistical Data Analysis). Overall, it included the following subprojects: MARS 1/1—the use of marine fish and bivalves for biomarker based pollution monitoring in coastal areas; MARS 1/2—the use of fish metabolic, pathological and parasitological indices in pollution monitoring; MARS 1/3—hydrogen peroxide in coastal waters: an early tracer of pollution and its biological impact; MARS 2/1—the use of marine fish and bivalves for biomonitoring of natural and man-made pollution in coastal areas; MARS 2/2—the use of fish parasitological, metabolic and immunological indices in pollution monitoring; MARS 2/3—biological cycling of inorganic carbon: its ecophysiological significance and its implications or geochemical and biological probes of CO2 concentration in the marine environment; MARS 2 Statistical Data Analysis—assimilation, statistical analysis and synthesis. The close collaboration between German and Israeli scientists is reflected by the many reciprocal work visits carried out during the 6-year-long project, summarized in Table 1. These cooperative activities also yielded 6 M.Sc. and 4 Ph.D. theses, as well as numerous scientific papers.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1999
A. Diamant; A. Banet; I. Paperna; Hein von Westernhagen; Katja Broeg; G. Kruener; W. Koerting; S. Zander