Beyond the Frontier: Listen to Michel André discussing this research on Frontiers' monthly podcast, at www.frontiersinecology.org. Acoustic trauma in cephalopods M André et al. 490 www.frontiersinecology.org
Abstract. A central problem in the area of Process Mining is to obtain a formal model that represents selected behavior of a system. The theory of regions has been applied to address this problem, enabling the derivation of a Petri net whose language includes a set of traces. However, when dealing with real-life systems, the available tool support for performing such task is unsatisfactory, due to the complex algorithms that are required. In this paper, the theory of regions is revisited to devise a novel technique that explores the space of regions by combining the elements of a region basis. Due to its light space requirements, the approach can represent an important step for bridging the gap between the theory of regions and its industrial application. Experimental results improve in orders of magnitude state-of-the-art tools for the same task.
There is a considerable lack of information concerning marine invertebrate sensitivity to sound exposure. However, recent findings on cuttlefish and octopi showed that exposure to artificial noise had a direct consequence on the functionality and physiology of the statocysts, sensory organs, which are responsible for their equilibrium and movements in the water column. Owing to a lack of available data on deep diving cephalopod species, we conducted a noise exposure comparative experiment on one Mediterranean squid, Illex coindetii, and on the European squid Loligo vulgaris. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed similar injuries in the inner structure of the statocysts, as those found in cuttlefish and octopi. In addition to the ultrastructural description of the lesions, we publish here the first images of the crista-cupula system and inner statocyst cavity of I. coindetii.
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