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Featured researches published by William F. Farnham.


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

Alien species and other notable records from a rapid assessment survey of marinas on the south coast of England

Francisco Arenas; John D. D. Bishop; James T. Carlton; P. J. Dyrynda; William F. Farnham; D. J. Gonzalez; Molly W. Jacobs; Charles C. Lambert; Gretchen Lambert; S. E. Nielsen; Judith Pederson; Joanne S. Porter; S. Ward; Christine A. Wood

Arenas, F., Bishop, J.D.D., Carlton, J.T., Dyrynda, P.J., Farnham, W.F., Gonzalez, D.J., Jacobs, M.W., Lambert, C., Lambert, G., Nielsen, S.E., Pederson, J.A., Porter, J.S., Ward, S., Wood, C.A. (2006). Alien species and other notable records from a rapid assessment survey of marinas on the south coast of England. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 86, (6), 1329-1337. Sponsorship: National Science Foundation grant IOB 0407527; Esme Fairbairn Foundation ALIENS project


American Journal of Botany | 2006

Evolutionary relationships of Mycaureola dilseae (Agaricales), a basidiomycete pathogen of a subtidal rhodophyte

Manfred Binder; David S. Hibbett; Zheng Wang; William F. Farnham

Mushroom-forming fungi (homobasidiomycetes) are major examples of morphological and ecological diversification in terrestrial habitats. Homobasidiomycetes includes only nine described species that are known from marine environments. Morphological traits that have concealed the ancestry of these fungi include reduced fruiting bodies with hairy surfaces and extremely modified spores, both of which may function as floating devices to aid successful dispersal and adhesion to various substrates such as driftwood. Our previous results suggested that all marine forms as yet investigated are placed in the Nia clade (euagarics) and that they have primarily evolved from cypelloid forms (minute, cup-shaped, terrestrial saprotrophs) via transitions through mangroves to fully marine habitats. We show here that Mycaureola dilseae, which parasitizes the red alga Dilsea carnosa, is a second independent lineage of marine fungi in the euagarics clade that is not related to cyphelloid forms. Phylogenetic reconstructions were based on two data sets: a partial four-region rDNA data set (nuc-ssu, nuc-lsu, mt-ssu, and mt-lsu) with inclusive sampling of 249 taxa and a densely sampled ITS data set including 32 taxa, which formed a clade with Mycaureola in the four-region rDNA analyses. Inferences using constrained and unconstrained six-parameter weighted parsimony, Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, and maximum likelihood approaches place M. dilseae in the morphologically diverse /physalacriaceae clade next to Gloiocephala spp., a group of highly reduced stipitate-pileate saprotrophs.


Botanica Marina | 2001

Additions to the Marine Algal (Seaweed) Flora of the Azores

Ian Tittley; Ana I. Neto; William F. Farnham; Manuela I. Parente

Abstract Ten species of benthic marine algae, new distribution records for the Azores achipelago, are itemised; two other species records (Heterosiphonia crispella and Laminaria ochroleuca) are confirmed for the islands. Six species (Bryopsis pennata, Cottoniella filamentosa, Dasya baillouviana, Feldmannia paradoxa, Heterosiphonia crispella and Lomentaria clavellosa) show an amphi-Atlantic distribution pattern; four (Bonnemaisonia asparagoides, Laminaria ochroleuca, Pterosphonia ardreana and Stylonema cornu-cervi) show a European-African-Mediterranean distribution pattern. The occurrence of Dudresnaya crassa, a western Atlantic warm-water species, represents an extension of its known distributional range to the east. An Ahnfeltiopsis was found which resembled A. intermedia, a species that occurs in the Atlantic Ocean to the south of the Azores.


Botanica Marina | 2004

Spatial variation in littoral Codium assemblages on Jersey, Channel Islands (southern English Channel)

Cynthia D. Trowbridge; William F. Farnham

Abstract Littoral surveys on Jersey shores in the Channel Islands (southern English Channel) revealed unexpected spatial variation in local-scale distributions of green macroalgae belonging to Codium species. Traditionally considered a low-shore alga, native C. vermilara inhabited high and/or mid-shore pools at nine of ten shores surveyed. This alga was frequent on semi-exposed shores. The introduced taxon C. fragile ssp. tomentosoides was patchily distributed with highest abundances in wave-sheltered areas. Zonation patterns of Codium spp. on Channel Island shores were more complex than those north of the English Channel.


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

Regional comparisons of Codium (Chlorophyta) assemblages in the northern versus southern English Channel

Cynthia D. Trowbridge; William F. Farnham

The cryptic invasion of the Asian macroalga Codium fragile (Suringar) Hariot ssp. fragile on north-eastern Atlantic shores has been long considered a classical example of a successful invader that has competitively displaced native congeners. Yet, the lack of quantitative information about morphologically similar native congeners, namely Codium tomentosum Stackhouse and C. vermilara (Olivi) Delle Chiaje, has hindered interspecific comparisons and ecological predictions. From September 2002 to 2005, we made extensive intertidal surveys on 12 northern and 26 southern rocky shores of the English Channel, specifically documenting the abundance, distribution and identity of Codium assemblages. On the north side of the English Channel, the native C. tomentosum and alien C. fragile were both sparsely distributed in intertidal pools in Devon. In contrast, the natives were absent from and the alien was locally abundant in shallow lagoons and rocky reefs around Bembridge and Whitecliff on the Isle of Wight. Finally, in the Channel Islands off the Atlantic coast of France, Codium spp. were abundant in pools and on low-shore emergent substrata with native species predominating. Patterns Of distribution varied substantially among Guernsey, Jersey and Alderney, despite their close proximity. The regional variation in the algal distributions merits further investigation to determine whether the pattern is produced by: (1) anthropogenic activities and effects; (2) ecological interactions; (3) oceanographic factors; or (4) some combination of these.


Botanical Journal of Scotland | 1985

The subtidal marine algal vegetation of Sullom Voe, Shetland, reassessed

Ian Tittley; William F. Farnham; Robert L. Fletcher; David E. G. Irvine

Summary The subtidal marine algal flora of Sullom Voe was reassessed in 1983 after an interval of ten years. Only a few changes in communities were detected; these, not surprisingly, were at sites of major coastal engineering works.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2004

Thriving populations of the native macroalga Codium tomentosum on Guernsey rocky shores

C.D. Trowbridge; William F. Farnham; L.F. White


Boletim do Museu Municipal do Funchal | 1998

Marine algae of the island of Flores, Azores : ecology and floristics

Ian Tittley; Ana I. Neto; William F. Farnham


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2008

Sacoglossan gastropods on native and introduced hosts in Lough Hyne, Ireland: larval retention and population asynchrony?

Cynthia D. Trowbridge; Colin Little; Penny Stirling; William F. Farnham


III Simpósio Fauna e Flora das Ilhas Atlânticas | 1998

Structure and zonation of algal communities in the bay of São Vicente (São Miguel, Azores)

Ana I. Neto; Ian Tittley; Andreia Levi; William F. Farnham

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Ian Tittley

Natural History Museum

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Ana I. Neto

University of the Azores

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Christine A. Wood

Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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Ian Tittley

Natural History Museum

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