Sara Belson’s research while affiliated with University of Southampton and other places

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Publications (2)


Figure 1. Number of identified taxa according to number of sampled ships (all shipping studies). 3.3 OTHER TAXA (BACTERIA, FUNGI AND PROTOZOANS) 
Table 1 . Number of ships sampled, number of samples and duration of shipping studies carried out in European countries.
Figure 2. Species, including species with unconfirmed identification (species cf.) of the flora (a) (total number of taxa 497), fauna (b) (total number of taxa 425), and bacteria, protozoa and fungi, summarised as "other taxa" (c) identified during all European shipping studies. Specimens that could not be ascribed to a genus level, were assigned to the lowest appropriate taxonomic unit (Family, Order etc.) summarised here as "higher taxa" with the addition "indet.". 
Figure 3. Bray-Curtis similarity analysis based on studies that collected fauna in ballast water. Species found in sediment samples are omitted unless they were found both in sediment and water samples (Abbreviations see Table A1). 
Table 4 . Fauna: Number of taxa identified during European shipping studies according to higher taxonomic unit. Crustacea broken down in taxonomic groups.

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Life in ballast tanks. pp. 217-231
  • Article
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January 2002

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529 Reads

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34 Citations

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E. Macdonald

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S. Belson

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T. Wittling

The abundance and diversity of species in ballast water, a recognised vector for the accidental introduction of nonindigenous organisms, has been examined through many studies around the world over the last 25 years. The results of European research activities are summarised in this contribution by outlining the objectives of some of these studies, and by focusing on the diversity of taxa determined from ballast water and tank sediment samples. In total 1508 samples (1219 ballast water, 289 tank sediment) were collected on 550 ships. A total of 990 taxa were identified during the 14 European shipping studies. The diversity of species found included bacteria, fungi, protozoans, algae, invertebrates of different life stages including resting stages, and fishes with a body length up to 15 cm. Crustacean, molluscan and polychaete invertebrates and algae form the majority of species found.

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Life in Ballast Tanks

January 2002

·

100 Reads

·

106 Citations

The abundance and diversity of species in ballast water, a recognised vector for the accidental introduction of nonindigenous organisms, has been examined through many studies around the world over the last 25 years. The results of European research activities are summarised in this contribution by outlining the objectives of some of these studies, and by focusing on the diversity of taxa determined from ballast water and tank sediment samples. In total 1508 samples (1219 ballast water, 289 tank sediment) were collected on 550 ships. A total of 990 taxa were identified during the 14 European shipping studies. The diversity of species found included bacteria, fungi, protozoans, algae, invertebrates of different life stages including resting stages, and fishes with a body length up to 15 cm. Crustacean, molluscan and polychaete invertebrates and algae form the majority of species found.

Citations (2)


... In addition, the specimen was captured near the major commercial port of Gijón, where not only have non-native species been previously n recorded (Cabal et al., 2006), but also where merchant vessels from the species´range had docked in the weeks prior to the capture (personal communication, Port Authority of Gijón). Ballast water from ships is a significant transport vector of non-native and invasive aquatic species (Gollasch et al., 2002). In the eastern Atlantic, ballast water has been identified out as a mechanism for the arrival of several native fishes from the western Atlantic, including Micropogonias undulatus (Linnaeus, 1766) (Stevens et al., 2004), Trinectes maculatus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Wolff, 2005) and Cynoscion regalis (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) (Morais & Teodósio, 2016;Bañón et al., 2018). ...

Reference:

First record of Diapterus brevirostris (Teleostei: Gerridae) in Atlantic European waters: a case of introduced species
Life in ballast tanks. pp. 217-231

... A genetic approach was used for studying resting eggs in ship ballast water, a pathway recognised as a potential dispersal mechanism for plankton since the late 1890s [39]. A large number of cladocerans are able to survive in ballast sediments [12]. Now resting eggs of water fleas are detected in ballast waters by molecular methods [184,185]; it is confirmed this mechanism is the main vector of inter-continental introductions of the Cladocera, and that domestic shipping is a way of their further dispersal [186]. ...

Life in Ballast Tanks
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2002