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Dive into the research topics where Pablo J. López-González is active.

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Featured researches published by Pablo J. López-González.


Polar Biology | 2001

Feeding strategies and diet composition of four Antarctic cnidarian species

Covadonga Orejas; Josep Maria Gili; Pablo J. López-González; Wolf Arntz

Abstract. The diet of four species of Antarctic cnidarians, two hydroids and two anthozoans, was investigated. One hydroid, Tubularia ralphii, and one anthozoan, Anthomastus bathyproctus, seem to basically consume zooplankton whereas the other hydroid species, Oswaldella antarctica, has a diet mainly based on the fine fraction of seston. The last cnidarian investigated, the stoloniferan alcyonacean, Clavularia cf. frankliniana, feeds mainly on resuspended material. The wide range of diets of these Antarctic cnidarians indicates opportunistic behaviour by feeding on different sources and taking advantage of the available food sources. Data related to low C/N ratios in the sediment and high NO2 concentrations in areas with dense communities of benthic suspension feeders, along with data on capture rates, lead us to hypothesize that these organisms play an important role in the recycling processes of organic matter in Antarctic benthic ecosystems.


Helgoland Marine Research | 1999

The benthic Gammaridea (Crustacea, Amphipoda) fauna of Algeciras Bay (Strait of Gibraltar): distributional ecology and some biogeographical considerations

Mercedes Conradi; Pablo J. López-González

Abstract The Gammaridea fauna of Algeciras Bay, located on the Mediterranean side of the Strait of Gibraltar, was studied with regard to the species composition, distribution and ecology. Of the 116 species identified, 13 are recorded for the first time along the Iberian Peninsula coast, 30 for the Spanish coast and 78 for the Andalusian coast. Two species, Apherusa bispinosa (Bate 1857) and Idunella nana (Schiecke 1973), were collected for the second time in the Mediterranean Sea; this represents the first record of I. nana since its original description. The abundances of the various species and their distribution in terms of bathymetry and type of substrate were analysed, as was the enlargement of the distributional range of some species in the Mediterranean Sea. With regard to biogeographical distribution, Algeciras Bay can be considered a typical Mediterranean locality despite being situated in the Strait of Gibraltar. This is in agreement with previous studies on the amphipod fauna of the Portuguese coast.


International Journal of Salt Lake Research | 1997

Seasonal fluctuations in the plankton community in a hypersaline temporary lake (Honda, southern Spain)

Pablo J. López-González; Francisco Guerrero; M. Carmen Castro

Honda saline lake is located in an endorheic basin in the south of Spain. The lake is very shallow, with frequent seasonal drought and a high degree of unpredictability. It was sampled monthly during a relatively dry year (1994–1995, 5 months permanence). To establish a relationship between environmental variables (temperature, depth, salinity and conductivity), variables related to biological activity (organic matter, total solids suspension, and pH) and the planktonic community in the sampled months, various uni-and miltivariate statistical methods were carried out.Dunaliella salina, D. viridis, and ciliates sp. 2 is the principal species group used to average out the dissimilarity between the samples. Muttivariate analysis showed that salinity (as TDS), conductivity and pH made major and significant contributions to the explanation of the variance in the sample data.


Steroids | 2004

New polyoxygenated steroids from the Antarctic octocoral Dasystenella acanthina.

Gonzalo G. Mellado; Eva Zubía; María J. Ortega; Pablo J. López-González

The chemical study of the Antarctic octocoral Dasystenella acanthina has led to the isolation of the new polyoxygenated steroids (24R,22E)-24-hydroxycholest-4,22-dien-3-one (1), 23-acetoxy-24,25-epoxycholest-4-en-3-one (2), 12beta-acetoxycholest-4-en-3,24-dione (3), 12beta-acetoxy-24,25-epoxycholest-4-en-3-one (4), (22E)-25-hydroxy-24-norcholest-4,22-dien-3-one (5), 3alpha-acetoxy-25-hydroxycholest-4-en-6-one (6), and 3alpha,11alpha-diacetoxy-25-hydroxycholest-4-en-6-one (7), whose structures have been established by spectroscopic analysis. The absolute stereochemistry at C-24 in compound 1 has been determined through the 1H NMR study of the corresponding (R)- and (S)-MPA esters. All the new compounds showed significant activities as growth inhibitors of several human tumor cell lines. In addition, cytostatic and cytotoxic effects were also observed on selected tumor cell lines.


Polar Biology | 2009

New family of sea anemones (Actiniaria, Acontiaria) from deep polar seas

Estefanía Rodríguez; Pablo J. López-González; Marymegan Daly

We describe and illustrate two new species from polar deep seas that belong to a new genus and family. Antipodactidae fam. nov. is characterized by acontia with macrobasic p-amastigophores; this type of nematocyst has never been reported from acontia. Antipodactis gen. nov. is characterized by a column with a distinct scapus and scapulus, cuticle-bearing tenaculi on the scapus, more mesenteries proximally than distally, mesenteries regularly arranged, restricted and reniform retractor musculature, and macrobasic p-amastigophores in the acontia. Antipodactis scotiae sp. nov. and A. awii sp. nov. differ in number of mesenteries, retractor and parietobasilar muscles, cnidae, and geographic distribution. We discuss the familial and generic characters of Antipodactis gen. nov. and its relationship to other families of acontiarian sea anemones: it most closely resembles members of Kadosactidae in terms of anatomy and some aspects of cnidom, and has a cnidom identical to that of Diadumenidae in terms of the types of nematocysts. Because the morphology of nematocysts is critical to the diagnosis of this family, we review and comment on the nomenclature of mastigophores. The macrobasic p-amastigophores of Antipodactidae fam. nov. conform to England’s (Hydrobiologia 216/217:691–697, 1991) definition rather than that of Mariscal (Coelenterate Biology. Academic Press, New York, pp 129–178, 1974).


Invertebrate Systematics | 2002

A new genus and species of sea pen (Octocorallia : Pennatulacea : Stachyptilidae) from the Antarctic Peninsula

Pablo J. López-González; Gary C. Williams

Only six of the thirty-three valid genera of sea pens have previously been recorded from the Southern Oceans (Subantarctic and Antarctic regions). The discovery of a new genus, Gilibelemnon, and new species, Gilibelemnon octodentatum, of stachyptilid sea pen is here reported from the South Shetland Islands, which makes a total of eight genera known to occur in the Southern Oceans and thirty-four genera of sea pens known worldwide. Diagnostic features of the new genus are described, including the presence of a clearly delimited dorsal and ventral naked track on the rachis, the calyces with eight long terminal teeth, the siphonozooids densely and irregularly distributed and the presence of three-flanged rods in the peduncle surface. A discussion of sea pen phylogeny and biogeography in the Antarctic region is also provided.


Polar Biology | 2006

A new Antarctic association: the case of the hydroid Sarsia medelae (new sp.) associated with gorgonians

Joseph-Maria Gili; Pablo J. López-González; Jean Bouillon

Sarsia medelae sp. nov. is described and illustrated from material collected in the Weddell Sea during the R/V Polarstern cruises ANT XVII/3 (April 2000) and in the Ross Sea during the R/V Italica cruise XIX (March 2004). The specimens have always been observed in association with several gorgonians of genera Thouarella sp., Primnoisis sp., and Notisis sp. The polyps of Sarsia medelae are considered as mesobiont of the gorgonian host with a non-parasitic relationship. It is the first time that this kind of association, which is so far only known from the Indian and Pacific Ocean, is reported in the Southern Ocean. This finding is discussed in the framework of the hypothesis that a part of Antarctic fauna has its origin in species dating back to before the Cretaceous period, because this kind of association between a hydroid and a gorgonian host being only known in the actual Antarctic shelf and in regions belonging to the previous Thethys areas.


Helgoland Marine Research | 2005

Asterocheres hirsutus, a new species of parasitic copepod (Siphonostomatoida: Asterocheridae) associated with an Antarctic hexactinellid sponge

M. Eugenia Bandera; Mercedes Conradi; Pablo J. López-González

The asterocherid siphonostomatoid copepod Asterocheres hirsutus, a new species, is described from a hexactinellid sponge of the genus Rossella Carter collected during the Polastern cruise ANT XVII/3, off South Shetland Islands. The distinctive features of this new species are: a female with 21-segmented and a male with 17-segmented antennules, praecoxal endite of maxillule more than four times longer than palp and the ornamentation of the posterior surface of legs 1–4. A detailed description of both sexes is presented.


Polar Biology | 2000

A new octocoral genus (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) from Antarctic waters

Pablo J. López-González; Josep Maria Gili

Sphaeralcyon weddellensis gen. nov. et sp. nov. is described and illustrated from three colonies collected in the eastern Weddell Sea on the Polarstern cruises ANT V/3 and ANT VI/3. The new genus is compared with three closely related alcyoniid genera, all having capitate or mushroom-shaped colonies and dimorphic polyps. Sphaeralcyon is readily distinguishable from Malacacanthus by the presence of sclerites (absent in the latter genus), and from Anthomastus by sclerite shape, mainly in the form of tuberculate spheroids, and by the horny periderm on the stalk (absent in Anthomastus). Sphaeralcyon also differs from Verseveldtia in the set of sclerites, which are elongate spiny rods and a different type of tuberculate spheroid, and in the presence of eight-points as anthocodial armature (absent in Verseveldtia). The discovery of this new genus lends further support to the notion that diversity in benthic communities in Antarctica is higher than suggested by previous studies.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Limited Genetic Connectivity between Gorgonian Morphotypes along a Depth Gradient.

Federica Costantini; Andrea Gori; Pablo J. López-González; Lorenzo Bramanti; Sergio Rossi; Josep Maria Gili; Marco Abbiati

Gorgonian species show a high morphological variability in relation to the environment in which they live. In coastal areas, parameters such as temperature, light, currents, and food availability vary significantly with depth, potentially affecting morphology of the colonies and the structure of the populations, as well as their connectivity patterns. In tropical seas, the existence of connectivity between shallow and deep populations supported the hypothesis that the deep coral reefs could potentially act as (reproductive) refugia fostering re-colonization of shallow areas after mortality events. Moreover, this hypothesis is not so clear accepted in temperate seas. Eunicella singularis is one of the most common gorgonian species in Northwestern Mediterranean Sea, playing an important role as ecosystem engineer by providing biomass and complexity to the coralligenous habitats. It has a wide bathymetric distribution ranging from about 10 m to 100 m. Two depth-related morphotypes have been identified, differing in colony morphology, sclerite size and shape, and occurrence of symbiotic algae, but not in mitochondrial DNA haplotypes. In the present study the genetic structure of E. singularis populations along a horizontal and bathymetric gradient was assessed using microsatellites and ITS1 sequences. Restricted gene flow was found at 30–40 m depth between the two Eunicella morphotypes. Conversely, no genetic structuring has been found among shallow water populations within a spatial scale of ten kilometers. The break in gene flow between shallow and deep populations contributes to explain the morphological variability observed at different depths. Moreover, the limited vertical connectivity hinted that the refugia hypothesis does not apply to E. singularis. Re-colonization of shallow water populations, occasionally affected by mass mortality events, should then be mainly fueled by larvae from other shallow water populations.

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Josep Maria Gili

Spanish National Research Council

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Covadonga Orejas

Spanish National Research Council

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Estefanía Rodríguez

American Museum of Natural History

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Jordi Grinyó

Spanish National Research Council

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Sergio Rossi

Spanish National Research Council

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Andrea Gori

University of Barcelona

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