Zooplankton methodology manual (Amsterdam, 2006). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
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ОбложкаZooplankton methodology manual / ed. by Harris R. et al. - Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2006. - xviii, 684 p. - ISBN 0-12-327645-4
 

Место хранения: 040 | Институт биофизики СО РАН | Красноярск | Библиотека

Оглавление / Contents
 
List of Contributors ......................................... xvii

Preface	 ....................................................... xix

1. Introduction ................................................. 1
   1.1. Introduction ............................................ 1
   1.2. General definitions ..................................... 1
   1.3. Size classification ..................................... 3
   1.4. Main systematic groups .................................. 5
   1.5. Species diversity ....................................... 6
   1.6. Ecological position ..................................... 8
   1.7. Distribution pattern ................................... 10
   1.8. Growth and metabolism .................................. 10
   1.9. Reproduction and development ........................... 12
   1.10.Standing stock and production .......................... 12
   1.11.Conclusion ............................................. 13
   1.12.References ............................................. 30
2. Sampling and experimental design ............................ 33
   2.1. Introduction ........................................... 33
   2.2. Conceptual issues ...................................... 34
        Increased emphasis on species dynamics ................. 34
        Integration of disciplines: zooplankton, between
        physics and fish ....................................... 35
        Integration of scales: from climatic to turbulent ...... 36
        Integration of approaches: from theory to field ........ 37
        Integration of pattern and process ..................... 38
        Integration of technologies and methods ................ 39
   2.3. Design of oceanographic cruises and surveys ............ 40
        Survey design considerations ........................... 40
        Survey design types .................................... 41
        Systematic design ...................................... 41
        Random design .......................................... 42
        Stratified random design ............................... 42
        Preferential design .................................... 42
        Other design types ..................................... 42
        Sampling in flow fields ................................ 43
        Examples of field programs ............................. 44
   2.4. References ............................................. 49
3. Collecting zooplankton ...................................... 55
   3.1. Introduction ........................................... 55
   3.2. A survey of sampling devices ........................... 57
        Pumps and traps ........................................ 57
        Nets and serial samplers ............................... 58
        Simple net samplers .................................... 58
        Multiple sample instruments ............................ 58
        Multiple net samplers .................................. 62
   3.3. Factors influencing mesozooplankton samples ............ 67
        Extrusion of zooplankton from nets ..................... 67
        Clogging of net mesh ................................... 70
        Avoidance .............................................. 70
        Effect of ambient light ................................ 72
        Mesh and frame color ................................... 72
   3.4. Handling towed samplers ................................ 72
   3.5. Care of towing cables .................................. 74
   3.6. Handling samples and sample preservation ............... 74
   3.7. Collection of live zooplankton for experimental
        studies ................................................ 76
        Copepods ............................................... 76
   3.8. Other zooplankton instruments used in conjunction 
        with nets .............................................. 77
        Optical plankton counter ............................... 77
   3.9. References ............................................. 78
4. Biomass and abundance ....................................... 83
   4.1. Introduction ........................................... 83
   4.2. Shipboard sample treatment ............................. 85
   4.3. Biovolume and biomass determinations (W. Hagen) ........ 87
        Volumetric methods ..................................... 88
        Settling volume ........................................ 88
        Displacement volume .................................... 89
        Gravimetric methods .................................... 90
        Wet mass, fresh mass and live mass ..................... 90
        Dry mass ............................................... 91
        Ash-free dry mass ...................................... 94
        Biochemical methods .................................... 94
        Sample preparation ..................................... 97
        Elemental analysis ..................................... 97
        Organic carbon (and hydrogen) ......................... 101
        Organic nitrogen ...................................... 103
        Organic phosphorus .................................... 105
        Organic compounds ..................................... 107
        Proteins .............................................. 107
        Lipids ( W. Hagen) .................................... 113
        Carbohydrates ......................................... 119
        Energy content ........................................ 122
        Adenosine triphosphate ATP ............................ 131
        Conversion factors and equations ...................... 139
   4.4. Abundance and species identification .................. 147
   4.5. Analysis of community structure (H. Fock) ............. 154
        Estimation of species numbers ......................... 155
        Diversity and similarity indices ...................... 158
        Classification and ordination: the detection of
        groups ................................................ 164
        Multivariate classification techniques ................ 164
        Recurrent group analysis .............................. 166
        Matching species and samples: indicator species
        analysis .............................................. 168
        Analysis of spatial and temporal formations ........... 169
        Examination of processes within communities by
        network analysis ...................................... 173
   4.6. Acknowledgment ........................................ 174
   4.7. References ............................................ 174
5. Sampling, preservation, enumeration and biomass of
   marine protozooplankton .................................... 193
   5.1. Introduction .......................................... 193
   5.2. Collection methods .................................... 196
        Nano- and microzooplankton ............................ 196
        Planktonic sarcodines ................................. 197
   5.3. Preservation and enumeration .......................... 201
        Nanozooplankton ....................................... 201
        Preservation .......................................... 201
        Nanozooplankton enumeration ........................... 202
        Microzooplankton ...................................... 203
        Microzooplankton preservation ......................... 203
        Microzooplankton enumeration .......................... 204
        Planktonic sarcodines ................................. 205
        Larger planktonic sarcodine preservation .............. 205
        Larger planktonic sarcodine enumeration ............... 206
   5.4. Determination of biomass: conversion factors .......... 206
        Nanozooplankton ....................................... 206
        Microzooplankton ...................................... 207
        Planktonic sarcodines ................................. 208
   5.5. Standard protocols .................................... 210
        Collection of nano- and microzooplankton .............. 210
        Preservation of nanozooplankton ....................... 210
        Staining and enumeration of nanozooplankton ........... 210
        Preservation of microzooplankton ...................... 211
        Enumeration of microzooplankton ....................... 212
   5.6. Acknowledgments ....................................... 212
   5.7. References ............................................ 212
6. Acoustical methods ......................................... 223
   6.1. Introduction .......................................... 223
   6.2. General discussion of principles, instruments,
        techniques, and comparative approaches ................ 223
        Review ................................................ 223
        Background ............................................ 223
        History ............................................... 224
        Basic principles ...................................... 224
        Active sonar equation ................................. 224
        Target strength models ................................ 226
        Sources of variability ................................ 231
        Measurement ........................................... 231
        Modeling .............................................. 232
        Generic instruments ................................... 232
        Echo sounder .......................................... 232
        Sonar ................................................. 233
        Acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) .............. 233
        Echo integrator ....................................... 233
        Post-processing system ................................ 233
        Methods of data processing and analysis ............... 234
        Echogram .............................................. 234
        Echo integration ...................................... 234
        Target strength determination ......................... 235
        Post-processing and data analysis ..................... 237
        Comparisons ........................................... 238
        Identification ........................................ 238
        Choosing an acoustic instrument ....................... 239
        Single-animal methods ................................. 239
        Multiple-animal methods ............................... 240
        Parameter ranges for scientific echo sounders ......... 240
   6.3. Measurement protocols, model computations, and
        examples .............................................. 241
        Calibration ........................................... 241
        Test measurements ..................................... 241
        Standard-target method ................................ 241
        Beam pattern measurement .............................. 242
        Elements of echo abundance surveying .................. 243
        Equipment ............................................. 243
        Signal processing ..................................... 244
        Equipment use ......................................... 244
        Medium ................................................ 244
        Scatterer identification .............................. 244
        Survey planning ....................................... 244
        Interpretation ........................................ 244
        Density measurement ................................... 244
        Interpolation ......................................... 244
        Abundance estimation .................................. 245
        System deployment ..................................... 245
        Evaluation of sonar performance ....................... 245
        Exemplary model computations .......................... 248
        Echo abundance surveying of Antarctic krill ........... 250
        Target strength determination by caged-animal
        measurement: Antarctic krill .......................... 251
        Monitoring zooplankton with a fixed acoustic system ... 251
        Acoustic estimates of size distribution using
        a multi-frequency system .............................. 252
   6.4. Acknowledgments ....................................... 253
   6.5. References ............................................ 253
7. Optical methods ............................................ 259
   7.1. Introduction .......................................... 259
   7.2. General discussion of principles, techniques, and
        comparative approaches ................................ 260
        Review ................................................ 260
        Basic principles ...................................... 261
        Light phenomena ....................................... 261
        Illumination .......................................... 262
        Water as an optical medium ............................ 263
        Light detection ....................................... 264
        Magnification and resolution .......................... 264
        Sources of variability ................................ 265
        Instrument effects .................................... 265
        Water medium .......................................... 265
        Animal-dependent effects .............................. 266
        Classes of light microscopy ........................... 266
        Imaging ............................................... 266
        Bright-field microscopy ............................... 267
        Contrast techniques ................................... 267
        Fluorescence microscopy ............................... 270
        Quantification ........................................ 272
        Techniques ............................................ 272
        Silhouette photography ................................ 272
        Optical plankton counting ............................. 273
        Video plankton recording .............................. 275
        Comparisons ........................................... 281
        Identification ........................................ 282
        Imaging versus quantification ......................... 283
        Venue and deployment .................................. 283
        Operating ranges of two systems ....................... 283
   7.3. Measurement protocols, model computations, and
        examples .............................................. 283
        Silhouette photography in the laboratory .............. 283
        Procedures ............................................ 284
        Further processing of the film ........................ 286
        Optical plankton counter .............................. 286
        Calibration including comparisons ..................... 286
        Limitations ........................................... 288
        Operating scenario .................................... 288
        Applications .......................................... 288
        Video plankton recorder ............................... 289
        Calibration including comparisons ..................... 289
        Limitations ........................................... 290
        Operating scenario .................................... 290
        Applications .......................................... 291
   7.4. Acknowledgments ....................................... 291
   7.5. References ............................................ 291
8. Feeding .................................................... 297
   8.1. Introduction .......................................... 297
   8.2. Feeding mechanisms of zooplankton ..................... 297
   8.3. Expression of zooplankton feeding rates and common
        conversion factors .................................... 299
        Clearance rate (F) .................................... 299
        Ingestion rate (I) .................................... 301
        Daily ration (DR) ..................................... 302
        Conversions between units of mass and energy .......... 303
   8.4. Microzooplankton ...................................... 303
        Methodological approaches ............................. 303
        Indirect methods to measure assemblage grazing ........ 306
        Correlation of natural consumer-prey cycles ........... 306
        Extrapolation of laboratory rates to the field ........ 306
        The pigment budget .................................... 307
        Acid lysozyme assay ................................... 307
        Direct methods to measure per capita grazing rates .... 308
        Food tracers: inert particles ......................... 308
        Food tracers: prey cells .............................. 310
        Food tracers: radioisotopes ........................... 311
        Food vacuole contents ................................. 313
        Prey removal .......................................... 314
        Direct methods to measure assemblage grazing rates .... 314
        Sea water dilution method ............................. 314
        Working procedures for the sea water dilution
        method ................................................ 316
        Size fractionation methods ............................ 319
        Metabolic inhibitor method ............................ 320
   8.5. Meso- and macrozooplankton ............................ 320
        Empirical relationships ............................... 320
        Field investigation on gut fluorescence ............... 322
        Sampling. 323 Preparation for analysis ................ 323
        Gut clearance coefficient ............................. 323
        Sorting animals ....................................... 325
        Extraction ............................................ 326
        Pigment analysis ...................................... 326
        Transformation to carbon .............................. 327
        Pigment destruction ................................... 327
        Working procedures for the gut fluorescence method .... 328
        Equipment ............................................. 328
        Supplies .............................................. 328
        Procedure ............................................. 328
        Measurement and calculations .......................... 330
        Comments and special precautions ...................... 330
        Gut contents of field sampled consumers ............... 330
        General procedures .................................... 331
        Special case: copepod mandibles in stomach contents ... 332
        Digestion ............................................. 333
        Methods based on budgets of material or energy ........ 335
        Growth ................................................ 336
        Egestion .............................................. 336
        Excretion ............................................. 337
        Respiration ........................................... 337
        Assimilation efficiency ............................... 337
        Measurement of assimilation efficiency: direct
        measurements .......................................... 338
        Measurement of assimilation efficiency: indirect
        calculation ........................................... 338
        Measurement of assimilation efficiency: ratio
        methods ............................................... 339
        Non-homogeneous food material ......................... 339
        Food selectivity ...................................... 339
        Sloppy feeding ........................................ 340
        Losses from fecal material ............................ 340
        Absorbance of IT in the digestive tract ............... 340
        Production of non-fecal material mixed with feces ..... 340
        Ash-ratio method ...................................... 341
        Chlorophyl-ratio method ............................... 341
        Silica-ratio method ................................... 342
        Radioisotope tracers .................................. 342
        Methodological comparisons ............................ 343
        Working procedures for laboratory experiments with
        isotopes .............................................. 343
        Working procedures for field experiments .............. 344
        Food removal methods .................................. 344
        Bottle effects during incubations ..................... 345
        Sloppy feeding ........................................ 346
        Estimates of community grazing rate ................... 346
        Working procedures with food removal methods .......... 350
        Collection of zooplankton ............................. 350
        The food source ....................................... 351
        Experiments ........................................... 351
        Sub-sampling .......................................... 353
        Microscopic examination of sub-samples ................ 354
        Feeding rate calculations ............................. 354
        Use of film and video to study feeding behavior ....... 355
        Biochemical indices ................................... 356
        Working procedures for measurement of digestive
        enzyme activity ....................................... 358
        Amylase ............................................... 358
        Trypsin ............................................... 358
   8.6. Difficulties with specific zooplankton groups ......... 359
        Stomach contents from field samples ................... 359
        Laboratory experiments ................................ 362
   8.7. Omnivory .............................................. 365
        A general method to estimate omnivory ................. 365
        Collection of consumers ............................... 366
        Collection and handling of water ...................... 366
        Sample collection, processing and analysis ............ 366
        Data analysis ......................................... 367
        Gut fluorescence and experimental egg production ...... 367
        Gut fluorescence and egestion rate .................... 367
        A method to estimate the importance of copepod prey
        for predators ......................................... 367
   8.8. Factors regulating feeding rate ....................... 368
        Abundance of food items ............................... 368
        Functional response. Model I .......................... 369
        Functional response. Model II ......................... 370
        Functional response. Modified model II ................ 370
        Functional response. Model III ........................ 371
        Design of functional response experiments ............. 371
        Calculation curve fits in functional response
        experiments ........................................... 372
        Size of food items .................................... 373
        Turbulence ............................................ 374
        Consumer body size .................................... 374
        Palatability/toxicity of food organisms ............... 375
        Physical environmental factors ........................ 376
        Temperature ........................................... 376
        Light ................................................. 376
        Spatial constraints ................................... 377
   8.9. Predation behavioral models ........................... 377
   8.10.Concluding remarks .................................... 378
   8.11.Acknowledgments ....................................... 379
   8.12.References ............................................ 380
9. The measurement of growth and reproductive rates ........... 401
   9.1. Introduction: why measure growth and reproductive
        rates of zooplankton? ................................. 401
        Factors controlling the dynamics of copepod
        populations ........................................... 402
        Variability in the production of the prey field
        for fish larvae ....................................... 402
        The influence of food availability on growth and
        egg laying rates, including the linkage between
        copepod spawning and primary production cycles ........ 402
        Evaluation of environmental impacts ................... 402
        Estimation of secondary production .................... 402
   9.2. Models of growth and fecundity ........................ 403
        Physiological or laboratory-derived budgetary
        models ................................................ 403
        Temperature-dependent empirical model ................. 405
        Global model of in-situ weight-specific growth ........ 406
   9.3. Determination of egg production rate: broadcast
        spawning copepods ..................................... 407
        The basic method ...................................... 407
        Procedures: know your species ......................... 409
        Capture and handling .................................. 409
        Duration of incubation ................................ 410
        Incubation containers and density of females .......... 410
        Temperature ........................................... 413
        Light regime .......................................... 414
        Food supply ........................................... 414
        Statistical considerations ............................ 415
        Estimation of spawning frequency from preserved
        samples ............................................... 416
        Egg viability ......................................... 416
   9.4. Egg production rates of egg carrying copepods ......... 418
        Egg ratio method ...................................... 418
        Incubation method ..................................... 419
   9.5. The determination of growth rate Estimation of
        growth rate from preserved samples and demographic
        information ........................................... 420
        Estimation of development time ........................ 420
        Estimation of mean weight ............................. 420
        Limitations and sources of error ...................... 421
        Direct measurement of growth rate ..................... 422
        The basic method ...................................... 422
        Procedures ............................................ 423
   9.6. Biochemical and radiochemical methods ................. 425
        Ratio of biochemical quantities ....................... 425
        Hormones and growth factors ........................... 426
        Enzyme activities ..................................... 427
        Radiochemical methods ................................. 433
        In vitro incorporation ................................ 433
        In vivo uptake ........................................ 435
        In vivo injection ..................................... 436
        In vivo ingestion ..................................... 436
   9.7. Measurement of egg production rate of a marine
        planktonic opepod (Calanus finmarchicus) .............. 439
        Facilities ............................................ 439
        Equipment and supplies ................................ 439
        Procedure ............................................. 440
        Capture ............................................... 440
        Sorting the catch ..................................... 440
        Incubation ............................................ 441
        Data analysis ......................................... 441
   9.8. Direct determination of copepod molting and growth
        rates in the field .................................... 441
        Facilities and equipment .............................. 441
        Supplies .............................................. 441
        Procedure ............................................. 442
        'Artificial cohort method' ............................ 442
        'Sorting method' ...................................... 442
        Data analysis and interpretation ...................... 443
        Molting rates ......................................... 443
        Growth rates .......................................... 443
        Notes and comments .................................... 443
        Creation of artificial cohorts: alternative
        techniques ............................................ 443
        Changing the water .................................... 444
   9.9. Acknowledgments ....................................... 444
   9.10.References ............................................ 444

10.Metabolism ................................................. 455
   Review ..................................................... 455
   10.1.Oxygen consumption as an index of metabolism .......... 455
        Conversion of oxygen consumption to carbon and
        calorific units ....................................... 458
   10.2.Nitrogen and phosphorus metabolism .................... 458
   10.3.Measuring metabolic rate on live zooplankton .......... 460
        Technical problems .................................... 461
        Body size and temperature as bases of metabolic
        comparison ............................................ 473
        Metabolic quotients ................................... 476
   10.4.Metabolic rate and enzymatic indices .................. 479
        ETS activity .......................................... 481
        Enzymes of intermediary metabolism .................... 484
   10.1.Potential sources of error ............................ 485
   10.5.Concluding remarks .................................... 489
        Practice (T. Ikeda and J.J. Torres) ................... 490
   10.6.Collection and handling of zooplankton ................ 490
   10.7.Respiration ........................................... 493
        Oxygen consumption-Winkler titration (T.Ikeda) ........ 493
        Oxygen consumption - electrodes (J.J.Torres) .......... 499
        Enzymatic method - electron transfer system
        (S.Hernandez-Leon) .................................... 506
        Enzymatic method - lactate dehydrogenase and
        citrate synthase (J.J. Torres and S.P. Geiger) ........ 510
   10.8.Excretion (T. Ikeda) .................................. 516
        Single end-point method ............................... 516
        Time-course method .................................... 517
        Ammonia and inorganic phosphate analysis .............. 517
   10.9.References ............................................ 520
11.Methods for population genetic analysis of zooplankton ..... 533
   11.1.Background ............................................ 533
   11.2.Technical approaches to determining genetic
        diversity ............................................. 534
        Allozymes ............................................. 534
        Restriction fragment length polymorphisms of DNA ...... 535
        DNA sequence analysis ................................. 536
        Oligonucleotide probe hybridization ................... 537
        Allele-specific PCR ................................... 540
        Microsatellite DNA .................................... 540
        RAPDs ................................................. 540
        New and emerging techniques ........................... 542
   11.3.Statistical approaches to assessing genetic
        diversity and structure ............................... 542
        Statistical measures of genetic diversity ............. 543
        Statistical measures of genetic structure ............. 545
        Statistical analysis of gene flow (dispersal) ......... 547
        Computer methods and software sources ................. 547
   11.4.Strategies for preservation of zooplankton samples
        for genetic analysis .................................. 549
        Preservation and storage in ethanol ................... 550
        Quick freezing in liquid nitrogen ..................... 550
        Formalin, glutaraldehyde, and other bad things ........ 551
        Dehydration ........................................... 551
        In situ molecular analysis ............................ 551
   11.5.General recommendations ............................... 552
   11.6.Measurement protocols ................................. 553
        Introduction .......................................... 553
        Facilities and equipment .............................. 553
        General laboratory rules .............................. 554
        Procedures ............................................ 554
        Sample preservation ................................... 554
        DNA purification ...................................... 555
        PCR amplifications .................................... 557
        Gel electrophoresis ................................... 559
        Gel purification of DNA ............................... 559
        Recipes and safety information ........................ 561
        Buffers and frequently used solutions ................. 561
        Safety information .................................... 561
   11.7.Further reading ....................................... 562
   11.8.Acknowledgments ....................................... 563
   11.9.References ............................................ 564
12.Modeling zooplankton dynamics .............................. 571
   12.1.Introduction .......................................... 571
   12.2.Modeling approaches and techniques .................... 572
        Steps of model building ............................... 572
        Choice of state and forcing variables ................. 572
        Choice of model units ................................. 573
        Choice of mathematical functions to model the
        interactions between variables ........................ 573
        Identification of parameters .......................... 573
        The mathematical description of the system ............ 574
        Systems of equations .................................. 574
        Numerical methods ..................................... 575
        Computer programing and languages ..................... 576
        Further reading ....................................... 576
   12.3.Models of individual bioenergetics and life-history
        traits ................................................ 577
        Individual bioenergetics .............................. 577
        Budget of individual zooplankton ...................... 577
        Ingestion rate.578 Assimilation and egestion .......... 585
        Excretion and respiration - energetic costs ........... 585
        Growth and egg production models ...................... 586
        Vital rates ........................................... 589
        Developmental stage durations of crustacean
        zooplankton ........................................... 590
        Mortality rates ....................................... 591
        Inverse methods to estimate vital rates ............... 592
        Evolutionary forces on the organism ................... 592
        Further reading ....................................... 595
   12.4.Population models ..................................... 595
        Populations described by one variable ................. 595
        Populations described by several variables -
        structured population models .......................... 595
        Discrete-time difference equation models and matrix
        models ................................................ 596
        Continuous-time structured population models .......... 600
        Stage-structured population models based on ODEs ...... 602
        Delay differential equation models .................... 606
        Structured population models to estimate
        demographic parameters ................................ 606
        Stochasticity in structured population models ......... 606
        Individual-based models of a population ............... 606
        Building an IBM ....................................... 607
        Object-oriented programing (OOP) ...................... 609
        Constraints in behavior ............................... 609
        Models of interactions between zooplanktonic
        populations ........................................... 610
        Interaction model with two variables .................. 610
        Population interactions using structured
        population models ..................................... 611
        Further reading ....................................... 611
   12.5.Models of zooplankton communities ..................... 612
        Zooplankton bulk models in ecosystem models ........... 612
        The representation of herbivorous zooplankton
        in NPZ-type ecosystem models .......................... 618
        From a single grazer to several grazers ............... 618
        Size-structured zooplanktonic community ............... 620
        Size-structured ecosystem models ...................... 620
        Size spectrum theory .................................. 621
        Size- and stage-structured zooplankton populations
        in ecosystem models ................................... 623
        Further reading ....................................... 623
   12.6.Modeling spatial dynamics of zooplankton .............. 624
        Modeling active behavior and counter-gradient
        search ................................................ 624
        Modeling behavioral mechanisms, aggregation and
        schooling patches ..................................... 625
        Modeling zooplankton behavior at the 'micro-scale' .... 625
        Evolutionary modeling approaches for optimal
        spatial distributions ................................. 627
        Models of plankton patchiness generated by
        population dynamics nteractions ....................... 633
        Grid-based models ..................................... 634
        Coupling IBMs and spatially explicit models ........... 635
        Passive particle trajectories from Lagrangian
        transport in model circulation fields ................. 635
        Trajectories of actively swimming particles from
        Lagrangian transport in model circulation fields ...... 537
        Spatial zooplankton dynamics with
        advection-diffusion-reaction equations (ADRE) ......... 638
        Modeling passive dispersion with ADREs ................ 639
        Modeling active vertical swimming with
        ADREs ................................................. 640
        Modeling the dispersion of a population in
        circulation models with ADREs ......................... 642
        Spatial distribution of zooplankton in ecosystem
        models coupled with ADREs ............................. 643
        Further reading ....................................... 643
12.7.Acknowledgments .......................................... 643
12.8.References ............................................... 644

Index ......................................................... 669

Plate section appears between pages 234 and 235.


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