Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Karen E. Webb is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Karen E. Webb.


Polar Biology | 2004

Movements and burrowing activity in the Antarctic bivalve molluscs Laternula elliptica and Yoldia eightsi

Lloyd S. Peck; Alan D. Ansell; Karen E. Webb; Leanne J. Hepburn; Michael Burrows

Burrowing was investigated in two Antarctic infaunal bivalve molluscs, Laternula elliptica and Yoldia eightsi, representing amongst the least and most active members of the class Bivalvia in the Southern Ocean. Burrowing rate was expressed via the Burrowing Rate Index (BRI=[3√wet weight/time to bury]×104), and produced values of 0.1–10.6 for L. elliptica and 8.8–49.8 for Y. eightsi. These compare with values ranging from 3 to 2,000 for N. American bivalves (mean=222, SE=42.6, n=81), and 200 to 2,200 for Hong Kong bivalves (mean=1,140, SE=346, n=6). Values for the Antarctic species are, therefore, low compared to warmer-water bivalves, and the values below 1 for large L. elliptica are the lowest on record by around ×5. There is no compensation of burrowing activity for low temperature in these species. The relative BRI values for L. elliptica and Y. eightsi reflect the differences in their mode of life, with the former being large, sedentary and suspension-feeding, and the latter being smaller, mobile, ploughing through the sediment and feeding on sediment-surface organic matter. Burrowing in L. elliptica is unexpected, because other members of the Laternulidae do not burrow. This ability is most probably a response to the regular disturbance of sediments in Antarctica by ice, and the strong selective advantage to being able to resume a protected position after disturbance. The burrowing cycle in L. elliptica is composed of three main phases: (1) foot extension and sediment penetration; (2) foot dilation to form an anchor; (3) the drawing down of the shell by contraction of the pedal retractor muscles. Burrowing in Y. eightsi also has three phases: (1) foot extension and penetration of the sediment (digging); (2) rocking movements in the upright position; (3) shell anchorage. In excess of burrowing activity, L. elliptica exhibits a unique suite of movements when exposed at the surface. These comprise levering, where the tips of the siphons are pressed against the sediment to lift the shell from the substratum, looping, where the siphons are extended and rotated and, in the process, translocate the whole animal across the sediment, and jetting, where water is ejected forcibly through the siphons while their tips are directed towards the sediment, lifting part or all of the animal clear of the substratum. In the field, following exhumation by icebergs, these activities serve to place the animal in a favourable position for reburial, which is a clear advantage in disturbed polar environments where predatory nemerteans and asteroids are abundant.


Functional Ecology | 2004

Extreme sensitivity of biological function to temperature in Antarctic marine species

Lloyd S. Peck; Karen E. Webb; David M. Bailey


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2006

DNA barcoding: a molecular tool to identify Antarctic marine larvae

Karen E. Webb; David K. A. Barnes; Melody S. Clark; David A. Bowden


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2008

Temperature limits to activity, feeding and metabolism in the Antarctic starfish Odontaster validus

Lloyd S. Peck; Karen E. Webb; Andrew Miller; Melody S. Clark; Tim Hill


Geo-marine Letters | 2009

Numerical simulation of upwelling currents in pockmarks, and data from the Inner Oslofjord, Norway

Øyvind Hammer; Karen E. Webb; Davy Depreiter


Geo-marine Letters | 2009

Pockmarks in the inner Oslofjord, Norway

Karen E. Webb; Øyvind Hammer; Aivo Lepland; John S. Gray


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2004

Polar pedunculate barnacles piggy-back on pycnogona, penguins, pinniped seals and plastics

David K. A. Barnes; Nicholas L. Warren; Karen E. Webb; Ben Phalan; Keith Reid


Polar Biology | 2007

Growth rate and its variability in erect Antarctic bryozoans

David K. A. Barnes; Karen E. Webb; Katrin Linse


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2006

Slow growth of Antarctic bryozoans increases over 20 years and is anomalously high in 2003

David K. A. Barnes; Karen E. Webb; Katrin Linse


Limnology and Oceanography | 2009

Pockmarks: Refuges for marine benthic biodiversity

Karen E. Webb; David K. A. Barnes; Sverre Plankea

Collaboration


Dive into the Karen E. Webb's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David K. A. Barnes

Natural Environment Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lloyd S. Peck

Natural Environment Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katrin Linse

British Antarctic Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Melody S. Clark

Natural Environment Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan D. Ansell

Scottish Association for Marine Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Miller

Natural Environment Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ben Phalan

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge