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Gammarus tigrinus Amphipod

Gammarus tigrinusis commonly referred to as Amphipod. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

Foto: 9mm. SERC, Rhode River, Edgewater, Anne Arundel County, MD - 05/12/15.

/CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ / Photo by Robert Aguilar
Courtesy of the author Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

Uploaded by AndiV.

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Profile

lexID:
15170 
AphiaID:
102296 
Scientific:
Gammarus tigrinus 
German:
Amphipode 
English:
Amphipod 
Category:
Other Crustaceans 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Arthropoda (Phylum) > Malacostraca (Class) > Amphipoda (Order) > Gammaridae (Family) > Gammarus (Genus) > tigrinus (Species) 
Initial determination:
Sexton, 1939 
Occurrence:
Russland, Gulf of St. Lawrence, the Baltic Sea, the North Sea, Antarctica, Bay of Biscay, Belgium, Canada , Danmark, East cost of USA, Estonia, European Coasts, Finland, Florida, France, Germany, Gulf of Maine, Invasive Species, Ireland, Labrador Península, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, North Atlantic Ocean, North-West-Atlantic, Poland, Scotland, the British Isles, Venezuela 
Marine Zone:
Supralitoral 
Sea depth:
0 - 3 Meter 
Habitats:
Brackish water, Estuaries (river mouths), Freshwater 
Size:
0,27 cm 
Temperature:
°F - 75.2 °F (°C - 24°C) 
Food:
Algae, Aquatic plant, Brine Shrimp Nauplii, Carnivore, Carrion, Detritus, Herbivorous, Invertebrates, Mosquito larvae, omnivore, Sludge worm , Water fleas (Daphnia pulex) 
Offspring:
Not available as offspring 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life:
 
More related species
in this lexicon:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2022-09-21 21:07:53 

Info

Gammarus tigrinus is an amphipod that lives in brackish and fresh water and is an important part of the food chain.

In living specimens the pattern is very distinctive, pale green or yellowish in males, more blue in females, with distinct cross bands of pale green with deep blue or black with gold.

The species name "tigrinus" refers to the unusual coloration found on the living individual, in the form of dark stripes on a light background.

Gammarus tigrinus is a gammarid amphipod native to the east coast of North America from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to Florida.
Introduced populations are known from the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence system, the upper Mississippi River, and fresh and brackish waters in Europe and Venezuela. In Europe, genetic studies indicate that the species has been introduced multiple times from different regions of North America.
Gammarus tigrinus has a high temperature and salinity tolerance and is characteristic of protected habitats, including algal beds, brackish marshes, and freshwater marshes and rocky shore pools.
In their introduced range, populations reportedly displace native amphipod species through competition and predation.

Scientific paper

  1. High fecundity and predation pressure of the invasive Gammarus tigrinus cause decline of indigenous gammarids, Jänes, Holger; Kotta, Jonne; Herkül, Kristjan , 2015
  2. IsGammarus tigrinus(Crustacea, Amphipoda) becoming cosmopolitan through shipping? Predicting its potential invasive range using ecological niche modeling, Jiawen Ba; Zhonge Hou; Dirk Platvoet; Li Zhu; Shuqiang Li, 2010
  3. Adaptation of Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939 to new environments—Some metabolic investigations, Monika Normant; Martin Feike; Anna Szaniawska; Gerhard Graf, 2007
  4. Natural organic matter (NOM) induces oxidative stress in freshwater amphipods Gammarus lacustris Sars and Gammarus tigrinus (Sexton), Maxim A. Timofeyev; Zhanna M. Shatilina; Aleksey V. Kolesnichenko; Darya S. Bedulina; Viktoria V. Kolesnichenko; Stephan Pflugmacher; Christian E.W. Steinberg, 2006
  5. Invasion of the North Amrican Amphipod ( Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939) into the Cronian Lagoon, South-Eastern Baltic Sea, Daunys, Darius; Zettler, Michael L. , 2006
  6. Predatory interactions between the invasive amphipod Gammarus tigrinus and the native opossum shrimp Mysis relicta, Bailey, Roberta J. E.; Dick, Jaimie T. A.; Elwood, Robert W.; MacNeil, Calum , 2006
  7. Colonization of the Laurentian Great Lakes by the Amphipod Gammarus tigrinus, a Native of the North American Atlantic Coast, Igor A. Grigorovich; Misun Kang; Jan J.H. Ciborowski, 2005
  8. The role of ion regulation in the control of the distribution ofGammarus tigrinus(Sexton) in salt-polluted rivers, J. H. E. Koop; M. K. Grieshaber, 2000
  9. Uptake and Retention of14C-Aroclor®1254 in the Amphipod,Gammarus tigrinus, Fed Contaminated Fungus,Fusarium oxysporum, A. E. Pinkney; G. V. Poje; R. M. Sansur; C. C. Lee; J. M. O'Connor, 1985
  10. A New Irish Location for Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, M. F. O'Grady and J. M. C. Holmes, 1983
  11. Studies on Gammaridea (Proceedings of the 3rd International Colloquium on Gammarus and Niphargus, Schlitz, 1975) || The Introduction of the Alien Amphipod Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939, in the Netherlands and Its Competition with Indigenous Species, S. Pinkster, H. Smit and N. Brandse-de Jong, 1977
  12. The population ecology of gammarus tigrinus (sexton) in the reed beds of the Tjeukemeer, M. R. Chambers, 1977
  13. Identity of Gammarus tigrinus Sexton 1939, HYNES, H. B. N., 1954
  14. New Records of Eucrangonyx gracilis S. I. Smith and Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, BASSINDALE, R., 1946

External links

  1. Die ersten Nachweise von Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939, und Chaetogammarus ischnus (Stebbing, 1906) (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Gammaridae) im Einzugs-gebiet der Ems und ihre verbreitungsgeschichtliche Einordnung (de). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  2. Distribution and ecology of Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939 and some other amphipod Crustacea near Beaufort (North Carolina, U.S.A.) (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  3. Flickr Homepage Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  4. Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939 continues its invasion in the Baltic Sea: first record from Bornholm (Denmark) (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  5. INVASION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN AMPHIPOD (GAMMARUS TIGRINUS SEXTON, 1939) INTO THE CURONIAN LAGOON, SOUTH-EASTERN BALTIC SEA (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  6. Nemesis (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  7. NOBANIS - Marine invasive species in Nordic waters - Fact Sheet (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  8. On a new species of Gammarus (G.tigrinus) from Droitwich District (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  9. Ostsee der Zukunft (de). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  10. Population dynamics of alien gammarid species in the River Odra estuary (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  11. Range expansion of the North American alien amphipod Gammarus tigrinus Sexton, 1939 (Crustacea: Gammaridae) in Brittany, France (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  12. World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS (en). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.
  13. Zur Biologie und Physiologie von Gammarus duebeni LILLJ., III: Zahlenverhältnis der Geschlechter und Geschlechtsbestimmung (de). Abgerufen am 14.09.2022.

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