konstantin a. lutaenko biodiversity researches in the institute of marine biology feb ras
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Institute of Marine Biology, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences was founded in 1967 by
Prof. Alexey V. Zhirmunsky as Marine BiologyDepartment of the Far Eastern Division, Siberian Branch of the
RAS. On January 1, 1970, the department was reorganized into the institute
THE MAJOR RESEARCH OBJECTIVES THE MAJOR RESEARCH OBJECTIVES OF THE INSTITUTE OF THE INSTITUTE
• the study of flora, fauna, ecology, and production of biota in the shelf zones of the seas;
• research on conservation, reproduction, and management of biological resources;
• the study of adaptation, ontogenesis and evolution of marine organisms
LIST OF LABORATORIES
• Chorology• Ecology of Shelf
Communities• Planktonology• Production Biology• Embryology• Invertebrate Ecology • Benthos Ecology • Genetics• Fish Population Biology
• Ichthyology• Physiology• Pharmacology• Cytophysiology• Comparative Cytology• Comparative
Biochemistry• Cell Biophysics• Aquatic Plant
Physiology
Major animal groups under taxonomic and faunal study in the IMB: Foraminifera,
Anthozoa, Cephalorhyncha, Nematoda, Nemertini, Polychaeta, Sipunculida, Mollusca (Gastropoda and Bivalvia), Isopoda, Ostracoda, Cumacea, fishes, and
Reptilia (Serpentes)
Biota of the Russian Waters of the Sea of Japan Vol. 1: Crustacea (Cladocera, Leptostraca, Mysidacea, Euphausiacea) and Pycnogonida
Vol. 2: Prokaryota
Vol. 3: Brachiopoda and Phoronida
Vol. 4: Amphipoda – Caprellidea
Vol. 5: Crustacea (Thoracica and Facetotecta)
Peter the Great Bay
52 phyla; 104 classes;840 families; 1855 genera;
3800 species
Cyanophyles – 130Rodophyles – 147Dinophyles – 183Phaeophyles – 72
Diatomophyles – 331Chlorophyles – 76Ciliophora – 157
Fungi – 68Cnidaria – 96
Plathelminthes – 222Nemathelminthes – 178
Annelida – 277Mollusca – 330
Crustacea – 620Echinodermata – 74
Chordata - 332
IMB
Vostok BayMarine Reserve
Oyster community occupies a major part of bottom in semi-enclosed bays and lagoons
Crassostrea gigas
Annual and seasonal long-time VIDEO-MONITORING of underwater landscapes, their dynamics, and marine biodiversity along the constant underwater transects
mounted in the protected (no-touch) water areas of Peter the Great Bay have been conducted since 2002 to assess and visualize any environmental and biotic changes
(Drs. A. Adrianov and V. Tarasov research teams)
Peter the Great Bay
Vostok Bay
Marine Reserve
Institute of Marine Biology
TREDA -"Tumen River
Development Area"
Integrated investigations ofmarine biological diversity,hydrological and hydro-chemical regimes have beenconducted using dredges,multi-corers, box-corers, planktonic nets, diving, multi-functional probe and loggers.
River mouth
What is the APN?Inter-governmental network in the AsiaPacific Region with the priority goals of:
Increasing developing country participation in global change research through networking and capacity building
Fostering global change through regional cooperation and partnerships
Strengthening interactions between the natural and social sciences in global change with the policy- and decision-making community
The Global Change Community
Scientific Community Inter- Governmental
Networks
START
IGBP
IHDP
WCRP
DIVERSITAS
IAIIAI
Programmes
APNAPN
EUEU
Climate Variability and Human Climate Variability and Human Activities in Relation to Activities in Relation to
Northeast Asian Land-Ocean Northeast Asian Land-Ocean Interactions and their Interactions and their
Implications for Coastal Zone Implications for Coastal Zone
ManagementManagement APN Project 2004-18-NMY APN Project 2004-18-NMY
APN/START Project 2005-05-CMY APN/START Project 2005-05-CMY
Participating countries: Participating countries: China, Republic of Korea and Russian China, Republic of Korea and Russian
Federation Federation
W O R K S H O P, Nanjing, China, December 4-8, 2004
CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND HUMAN ACTIVITIES IN RELATION TO NORTHEAST ASIAN AND-OCEAN INTERACTIONS AND
THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
Ecological Studies and State of the Ecosystem of Amursky Bay and Estuarine Zone of the Razdolnaya River (Sea of Japan). Vol. 1
EDITORS: Konstantin A. Lutaenko and Marina A. Vashchenko O.N. Pavlyuk, Yu.A. Trebukhova
The Razdolnaya River impact on the composition of meiobenthos in the northern part of Amursky Bay
(Peter the Great Bay, Sea of Japan)
T.S. Tarasova
Long-term changes in composition and distribution of the Recent benthic Foraminifera in the eastern part
of Amursky Bay (Peter the Great Bay, Sea of Japan)
M.B. Ivanova, L.S. Belogurova, A.P. Tsurpalo
Composition and distribution of the intertidal communities in the estuarine zone of the inner part of
Amursky Bay (Peter the Great Bay, Sea of Japan)
I.R. Levenets, A.V.Skriptsova
Benthic flora of the innermost part of Amursky Bay
A.V. Chernyshev
Fauna of nemerteans of Amursky Bay and the adjacent areas
L.A. Tsareva, A.A. Kepel
Cumacea of the inner part of Amursky Bay (Sea of Japan)
M.A. Zenina, E.I. Schornikov
Ostracod assemblages of the freshened part of Amursky Bay and lower reaches of Razdolnaya
River (Sea of Japan)
M.A. Zenina, E.I. Schornikov
Ostracod assemblages of the freshened part of
Amursky Bay and lower reaches of Razdolnaya
River (Sea of Japan)
APN Project (2007-2008)
ARCP2007-12NMY
MARINE BIODIVERSITY OF THE COASTAL ZONES IN THE NW PACIFIC: STATUS, REGIONAL THREATS, EXPECTED
CHANGES AND CONSERVATION
to collect information about overall species diversity and to compile species lists of biota as a basis for monitoring of expected changes
to develop the method of videomonitoring of marine biota along the long-term fixed transects
to inspect and study the species composition and ecological characteristics of the biofouling communities and ballast waters of ships
to summarize data on biodiversity loss and modifications on tidal flats in three involved countries
A.V. Adrianov, V.V. Malakhov
Cephalorhyncha of the World Ocean
Treatise on morphology and taxonomy of
Priapulida, Loricifera, Kinorhyncha and Nematomorpha
Marine fish fauna of the Primorye region is estimated about 306 species,103 of them being south migrants entering our waters in warm years
13 species of tropical and subtropical fishes, new for Russian waters, entered the bay within the last 10 years. 9 tropical species have been caught
within the last 5 years (2000-2004) because of the warming of surface waters
1. Coryphaena equisetis (dorado) 2. Brama japonica (Japanese bream) 3. Micracanthus striatus (striated micracanth)
4. Girella punctata (spotted girella) 5. Pictiblennius yatabei (Yatabe blenniform fish) 6. Chirolophis saitone
(Saito blenniform fish) 7. Hyperogliphe japonica
(Japanese gyperogliph) 8. Hexagrammos otakii (Japanese greenling)
9. Liparis punctulatus (striped sea-snail) 10. Histrio histrio (frogfish)
11. Sphaeroides pachygaster (ball fish) 12. Seriola dumerili (greater amberfish)
13. Parupeneus spilurus (Japanese goat-fish)
Annual and seasonal long-time monitoring of fish fauna in the Peter the Great Bay (Dr. A. Sokolovsky’s research team)
All these species are at the first stages of acclimatization; still there are no stable populations naturalized into local communities.
Some warm-water species – garfish,half-beaks, thread herring, Japanese
anchovy, mullet – extend their area ofdistribution and have been involved into
fishery process in the Peter the Great Bay
At the same time, some cold-waterspecies valuable for fishery – walleyepollock, Pacific herring, saffron cod,
plaices – often migrate from the Peter the Great Bay to north for reproduction
Annual and seasonal long-time monitoring of fouling marine organisms introduced to the Peter the Great Bay with warm water currents,
ships, and ballast waters. (Dr. A. Zvyagintsev’s research team)
16 species of tropical and subtropical sessile invertebrates (hydrozoans,cirripedes, amphipods, polychaetes, bryozoans, tunicates) introduced inour waters are found being in the process of acclimatization in the local
communities of the Peter the Great Bay within the last few years.All of them are found as component of fouling on hydrotechnic
constructions (HTC)of the ports and harbors in Peter the Great Bay
Crustacean Balanus amphitrite, worm Hydroides elegans, and ascidian Molgulamanhattensis cause significant changes in benthic communities and are close to
so-called “ecological explosion”
Solitary ascidian (Tunicata), Molgula manhattensis,introduced in 1999, became dominant in the fouling
community after 4 months of immersion of the test plates in the Golden Horn
Inlet (Vladivostok port)
Yu.Ya. Latypov, T.N. Dautova
CORALS – SCLERACTINIANS
OF VIETNAM
5 volumes published
356 species described and illustrated
O.G. Kussakin
Marine and Brackish-Water Isopods of the Cold and Temperate
Waters of the Northern Hemisphere
5 volumes (1979-2003)
Annual seasonal monitoring of phytoplankton including toxic microalgae
25 potentially toxic species were found in Peter
the Great Bay
Institute of Marine Biology is headquarters of the
RUSSIAN FAR EAST MALACOLOGICAL SOCIETY
(established in 1994 by
Prof. A.I. Kafanov)
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About 40 members including foreign (China, Korea, Japan,
USA)
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A medium published – the Bulletin of the RFEMS (10 volumes since
1996) and distributed to more than 100 libraries, museums and institutions around the world
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2 meeting held including one international in 2004
BIOLOGIYA MORYA
and its simultaneous translation into English – RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF MARINE BIOLOGY – are
official journals of the Russian Academy of
Sciences published since 1975
(founder – Prof. Alexey V. Zhirmunsky)