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Featured researches published by Karin Boos.


EPIC3In the wrong place - alien marine Crustaceans : distribution, biology and impacts / Bella S. Galil ... Eds. Dordrecht [u.a.] : Springer, 126-156 (Invading nature - Springer series in invasion ecology ; 6 ), ISBN: 978-94-007-0590-6 | 2011

The Japanese Skeleton shrimp Caprella mutica (Crustacea, Amphipoda): a global invader of coastal waters.

Karin Boos; Gail V. Ashton; Elizabeth Cook

Successful invasion must be viewed as the result of a unique sequence of events, with the established species overcoming a number of previously prohibitive obstacles, for example lack of dispersal vectors, habitat characteristics and environmental conditions of the new area, and the ability to persist in interspecific interactions in the new community. The Japanese skeleton shrimp, Caprella mutica, is proving to be a highly successful non-native crustacean in coastal waters outside its native range having overcome these obstacles. In the past 40 years, C. mutica has spread from its native sub-boreal waters of north-east Asia to numerous locations in both the northern and southern hemisphere, where it has successfully established self-sustaining and thriving populations. After its first European record from the Netherlands in 1995, C. mutica spread rapidly within the North Sea and later to the west coast of Scotland and to Ireland in less than 15 years. Caprella mutica is generally associated with man-made structures and can be found in abundance on boat hulls, floating pontoons and aquaculture infrastructure clinging to fouling organisms.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2009

Rapid changes in the epifaunal community after detachment of buoyant benthic macroalgae.

Lars Gutow; Luis Giménez; Karin Boos; Reinhard Saborowski

Rafting on floating macroalgae is a common dispersal mechanism of marine benthic invertebrates. Most benthic macroalgae are inhabited by diverse epifaunal communities but not all organisms may be adapted to live on floating algae. In particular, knowledge about the immediate effects of algal detachment on the associated biota is limited. Herein, we studied the composition of the communities of mobile invertebrates on benthic thalli of Ascophyllum nodosum and compared it with detached thalli that had floated for short periods. The community of the mobile invertebrates changed significantly within the first minute after detachment of the algae and showed decreased diversity and a tendency towards reduced abundances in most taxa. However, during the subsequent two hours of floating at the sea surface the species composition did not change further. A comparison of the size-spectra of the gastropod Littorina obtusata from attached and detached algae did not reveal differential migratory activity among size-classes of these gastropods. Most of the species encountered in this study are common rafters in coastal and offshore waters, which are well capable of holding onto floating seaweeds. Therefore, our results indicate that the animals actively abandoned the macroalgae immediately after detachment. A benefit of this behaviour may be to avoid increased predation risk in the open water. The fact that individuals remain associated with their algal host after detachment indicates the importance of rafting dispersal for a great variety of phytal species that might lead to range expansion and regional population persistence through metapopulation effects.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2006

Brittle stars (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) in the German Bight (North Sea) species diversity during the past 130 years

Karin Boos; Heinz-Dieter Franke

In this study, an overview of the current species composition of ophiuroids off Helgoland, German Bight (North Sea) is given. In addition, abundance and distribution of ophiuroids on different types of soft bottom sediments taken by van Veen grab samples around Helgoland was recorded. Literature was reviewed in order to outline the diversity of ophiuroid species over the past 130 years in the inner German Bight. In historical literature, quantitative references often apply to verbal descriptions and thus make comparisons to modern data and assessment of possible changes in abundance rather subjective.In total, six ophiuroid species were identified off Helgoland: Acrocnida brachiata (Montagu, 1804), Amphiura filiformis (M?ller, 1776), Amphipholis squamata (Delle Chiaje, 1829), Ophiothrix fragilis (Abildgaard, 1789), Ophiura albida Forbes, 1839 and Ophiura ophiura (Linnaeus, 1758). The species found in this study had also been reported by previous investigators and are regarded as ?common? species in the German Bight. Occasional findings in this area refer to Amphiura chiajei Forbes, 1843, Ophiopholis aculeata (Linnaeus, 1767), Ophiocten affinis (L?tken, 1858) and Ophiura sarsii L?tken, 1858, which are regarded here as ?rare? species. These findings, however, do not indicate sustainable changes in the species diversity over time.Apart from A. brachiata, a newcomer in the 1970s, findings of the common species mentioned above can be dated back to 1875. Therefore, a fairly stable composition of brittle stars is represented in the inner German Bight during the past 130 years.


Oecologia | 2018

Combined effects of predator cues and competition define habitat choice and food consumption of amphipod mesograzers

Jan Beermann; Karin Boos; Lars Gutow; Maarten Boersma; Ana Carolina Peralta

Predation has direct impact on prey populations by reducing prey abundance. In addition, predator presence alone can also have non-consumptive effects on prey species, potentially influencing their interspecific interactions and thus the structure of entire assemblages. The performance of potential prey species may, therefore, depend on both the presence of predators and competitors. We studied habitat use and food consumption of a marine mesograzer, the amphipod Echinogammarus marinus, in the presence/absence of a fish mesopredator and/or an amphipod competitor. The presence of the predator affected both habitat choice and food consumption of the grazer, indicating a trade-off between the use of predator-free space and food acquisition. Without the predator, E. marinus were distributed equally over different microhabitats, whereas in the presence of the predator, most individuals chose a sheltered microhabitat and reduced their food consumption. Furthermore, habitat choice of the amphipods changed in the presence of interspecific competitors, also resulting in reduced feeding rates. The performance of E. marinus is apparently driven by trait-mediated direct and indirect effects caused by the interplay of predator avoidance and competition. This highlights the importance of potential non-consumptive impacts of predators on their prey organisms. The flexible responses of small invertebrate consumers to the combined effects of predation and competition potentially lead to changes in the structure of coastal ecosystems and the multiple species interactions therein.


Scientifica | 2016

Low Density of Top Predators (Seabirds and Marine Mammals) in the High Arctic Pack Ice.

Claude R. Joiris; Karin Boos; Diederik D’Hert; Dominik A. Nachtsheim

The at-sea distribution of top predators, seabirds and marine mammals, was determined in the high Arctic pack ice on board the icebreaker RV Polarstern in July to September 2014. In total, 1,620 transect counts were realised, lasting 30 min each. The five most numerous seabird species represented 74% of the total of 15,150 individuals registered: kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, fulmar Fulmarus glacialis, puffin Fratercula arctica, Rosss gull Rhodostethia rosea, and little auk Alle alle. Eight cetacean species were tallied for a total of 330 individuals, mainly white-beaked dolphin Lagenorhynchus albirostris and fin whale Balaenoptera physalus. Five pinniped species were represented by a total of 55 individuals and the polar bear Ursus maritimus was represented by 12 individuals. Four main geographical zones were identified: from Tromsø to the outer marginal ice zone (OMIZ), the Arctic pack ice (close pack ice, CPI), the end of Lomonosov Ridge off Siberia, and the route off Siberia and northern Norway. Important differences were detected between zones, both in species composition and in individual abundance. Low numbers of species and high proportion of individuals for some of them can be considered to reflect very low biodiversity. Numbers encountered in zones 2 to 4 were very low in comparison with other European Arctic seas. The observed differences showed strong patterns.


Aquatic Invasions | 2006

Rapid assessment of the distribution of marine non-native species in marinas in Scotland

Gail V. Ashton; Karin Boos; Richard Shucksmith; Elizabeth Cook


Aquatic Invasions | 2006

Risk assessment of hull fouling as a vector for marine non-natives in Scotland.

Gail V. Ashton; Karin Boos; Richard Shucksmith; Elizabeth Cook


Aquatic Invasions | 2007

European expansion of the introduced amphipod Caprella mutica Schurin 1935

Elizabeth Cook; Marlene Jahnke; F. Kerckhof; Dan Minchin; Marco Faasse; Karin Boos; Gail V. Ashton


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2007

Differential life history responses of two Idotea species (Crustacea : Isopoda) to food limitation

Lars Gutow; Sonja Leidenberger; Karin Boos; Heinz-Dieter Franke


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2010

Sediment preference and burrowing behaviour in the sympatric brittlestars Ophiura albida Forbes, 1839 and Ophiura ophiura (Linnaeus, 1758) (Ophiuroidea, Echinodermata)

Karin Boos; Lars Gutow; Roger Mundry; Heinz-Dieter Franke

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Reinhard Saborowski

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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Heinz-Dieter Franke

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Jan Beermann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Elizabeth Cook

Scottish Association for Marine Science

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Gail V. Ashton

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

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