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  • Other Sources  (525)
  • GEOMAR  (289)
  • Oxford Univ. Press  (229)
  • American Chemical Society (ACS)
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  • 1
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Oxford, Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 7, no. XVI:, pp. 227-235, (ISBN 3-342-00685-4)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Inelastic ; Textbook of geophysics ; Physical properties of rocks ; Laboratory measurements ; Textbook of physics
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  • 2
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Oxford, Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 3, pp. 158, (ISBN 0-444-50968-2)
    Publication Date: 1964
    Keywords: Textbook of physics ; Friction ; Physical properties of rocks ; Fluids
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  • 3
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Oxford, 3rd Edition, 459 pp., Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 46, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN: 0-387-30752-4)
    Publication Date: 1961
    Keywords: Textbook of mathematics ; Statistical investigations ; Error analysis ; Earthquake hazard
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  • 4
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  New York, 330 pp., Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 65-66, (ISBN 0-19-850694-5)
    Publication Date: 2004
    Keywords: Textbook of physics ; critical ; phenomena, ; elementary ; particles, ; phase ; transitions, ; Ising
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  • 5
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  New York, 2nd ed. (1st in 1988), 559 pp., Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 52, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 95-104, (ISBN: 0-08-044051-7)
    Publication Date: 2000
    Keywords: Rheology ; Inelastic ; Textbook of engineering ; Textbook of geophysics
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  • 6
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Cary, NC 27513; 304 pp., Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 632 pp., (ISBN 0-19-513895-3)
    Publication Date: 2000
    Keywords: Statistical investigations ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of geology ; Textbook of informatics ; GIS ; Bayesian ; Maximum ; Entropy ; (Boundary Element Method)
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  • 7
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  New York, 230 pp., Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 15, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 585, (ISBN 0080424309)
    Publication Date: 2000
    Keywords: ethics ; moral ; misconduct ; objectivity ; ideology ; repeatability ; method
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  • 8
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Oxford, Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 65-66, (ISBN: 3-528-02574-3)
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Textbook of informatics ; FTN90 ; software ; compiler
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  • 9
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Dordrecht, Oxford Univ. Press, vol. 20, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 81-89, (ISBN 8189304143)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Fluids ; PAG
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: An investigation was carried out on larvae of the oceanic tropical squid Sthenoteuthis pteropus in the equatorial Atlantic (2°30′N–7°S;12°W –8°30′E) The age of the larvae was calculated from the statolith microstructure of 20 larvae; mortality was estimated from the size structure of 1128 larvae. The larval stage lasts 32–38 days. At ages ranging from 14 to 38 days. the daily relative growth rates of mantle length decrease from 7.5 to 2.8% day −1 and from 14–16 to 5.8% of body weight day −1 At age 12–24 days, mortality rates were estimated using both raw catch data and corrected data accounting for net avoidance. The mean value of raw mortality rates was 0.189, the corrected value was 0.158. During the proboscis division (transformation of the larva into juvenile) at age 25–35 days, a sharp decrease in larval growth rates and a simultaneous increase in mortality rates (raw 0.443, corrected 0.379) were observed.
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  • 11
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 52 (1). pp. 127-137.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: A number of reproductive indices were compared with a subjective maturity scale for assessment of Loligo forbesi maturity. The ratio between nidamental gland length and mantle length corresponded well with female maturation, as did the ovary mass-soma mass and nidamental gland mass-soma mass ratios. For males, the ratio between spermatophoric complex mass and somatic mass was found to be the most suitable for maturity assessment. The timing of recruitment and maturation of L. forbesi in Irish waters was described from the size and maturity of squid in commercial landings in the south of Ireland during the years 1991–1993. Immature squid first appeared in commercial catches in July and August, and this represented the main period of recruitment. A second period of recruitment was apparent in December 1991, but was not identified in the 1992–1993 season. Mature females were present in the commercially exploited population between November and April, with a small number also found in the summer. The abundance of egg masses was used to indicate timing of spawning. Egg masses recovered from the Cork coast indicated that peak spawning occurred during the winter months, but continued on a small scale for much of the year.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The transition from benthos to plankton requires multiple adaptations, yet so far it remains unclear how these are acquired in the course of the transition. To investigate this process, we analyzed the genetic diversity and distribution patterns of a group of foraminifera of the genus Bolivina with a tychopelagic mode of life (same species occurring both in benthos and plankton). We assembled a global sequence data set for this group from single-cell DNA extractions and occurrences in metabarcodes from pelagic environmental samples. The pelagic sequences all cluster within a single monophyletic clade within Bolivina. This clade harbors three distinct genetic lineages, which are associated with incipient morphological differentiation. All lineages occur in the plankton and benthos, but only one lineage exhibits no limit to offshore dispersal and has been shown to grow in the plankton. These observations indicate that the emergence of buoyancy regulation within the clade preceded the evolution of pelagic feeding and that the evolution of both traits was not channeled into a full transition into the plankton. We infer that in foraminifera, colonization of the planktonic niche may occur by sequential cooptation of independently acquired traits, with holoplanktonic species being recruited from tychopelagic ancestors
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  • 13
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 39 (6). pp. 943-961.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The sea surface microlayer (SML) is the uppermost layer of the water column that links the ocean and atmosphere. It accumulates a variety of biogenic surface-active and buoyant substances, including gelatinous material, such as transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) and Coomassie stainable particles (CSP), potentially affecting air–sea exchange processes. Here, we studied the influence of the annual cycle of phytoplankton production on organic matter (OM) accumulation in the SML relative to the subsurface water (SSW). Sampling was performed monthly from April 2012 to November 2013 at the Boknis Eck Time Series Station (Baltic Sea). For SML sampling, we used the Garrett screen, while SSW samples were collected by Niskin bottles at 1 m depth. Samples were analyzed for carbohydrates, amino acids, TEP, CSP, chlorophyll a (SSW only) and bacterial abundance. Our data showed that the SML reflected the SSW during most parts of the year, with changes mainly responding to bloom formation and decay. OM composition during phytoplankton blooms clearly differed from periods of higher bacterial abundance. Of all components investigated, only the enrichment of total carbohydrates in the SML was inversely related to the wind speed indicating that wind-driven mixing also affected the accumulation of OM in the SML during our study.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: On 25 December 2016, a Mw 7.6 earthquake broke a portion of the Southern Chilean subduction zone south of Chiloé Island, located in the central part of the Mw 9.5 1960 Valdivia earthquake. This region is characterized by repeated earthquakes in 1960 and historical times with very sparse interseismic activity due to the subduction of a young (~15 Ma), and therefore hot, oceanic plate. We estimate the co-seismic slip distribution based on a kinematic finite fault source model, and through joint inversion of teleseismic body waves and strong motion data. The coseismic slip model yields a total seismic moment of 3.94×1020 Nm that occurred over ~30 s, with the rupture propagating mainly downdip, reaching a peak-slip of ~4.2 m. Regional moment tensor inversion of stronger aftershocks reveals thrust type faulting at depths of the plate interface. The fore- and aftershock seismicity is mostly related to the subduction interface with sparse seismicity in the overriding crust. The 2016 Chiloé event broke a region with increased locking and most likely broke an asperity of the 1960 earthquake. The updip limit of the main event, aftershocks, foreshocks and interseismic activity are spatially similar, located ~15 km offshore and parallel to Chiloé Islands west coast. The coseismic slip model of the 2016 Chiloé earthquake suggests a peak slip of 4.2 m that locally exceeds the 3.38 m slip deficit that has accumulated since 1960. Therefore, the 2016 Chiloé earthquake possibly released strain that has built up prior to the 1960 Valdivia earthquake.
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  • 15
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    American Chemical Society (ACS)
    In:  Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, 53 (17). pp. 6998-7007.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-03
    Description: Structure I methane hydrates are formed in situ from water-in-mineral oil emulsions in a high pressure rheometer cell. Viscosity is measured as hydrates form, grow, change under flow, and dissociate. Experiments are performed at varying water volume fraction in the original emulsion (0–0.40), temperature (0–6 °C), and initial pressure of methane (750–1500 psig). Hydrate slurries exhibit a sharp increase in viscosity upon hydrate formation, followed by complex behavior dictated by factors including continued hydrate formation, shear alignment, methane depletion/dissolution, aggregate formation, and capillary bridging. Hydrate slurries possess a yield stress and are shear-thinning fluids, which are described by the Cross model. Hydrate slurry viscosity and yield stress increased with increasing water volume fraction. As driving force for hydrate formation decreases (increasing temperature, decreasing pressure), hydrate slurry viscosity increases, suggesting that slower hydrate formation leads to larger and more porous aggregates. In total, addition of water to a methane saturated oil can cause more than a fifty-fold increase in viscosity if hydrates form.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: We used a molecular phylogenetic approach to investigate species delimitation and diversification in the northeastern Atlantic and Mediterranean musseldrills of the Ocinebrina aciculata complex, based on molecular data from topotypical material of many of the nominal taxa. The complex is shown to consist of at least five species: Ocinebrina aciculata (Lamarck, 1822) from the Atlantic and western Mediterranean; O. cf. corallina (Scacchi, 1836) from the central Mediterranean Sea; O. reinai Bonomolo & Crocetta, 2012 from the Tyrrhenian Sea; O. corallinoides Pallary, 1912 from the Gulf of Gabès; and O. aegeensis n. sp. currently known from the Aegean Sea only. The new species is differentiated from the other taxa by very subtle morphological diagnostic features, although it is clearly identified by genetic distance and apomorphic DNA-sequence characters. The identity of Murex corallinus Scacchi, 1836 (type species of Ocinebrina Jousseaume, 1880) could not be defined with certainty, pending genetic comparison of specimens of the â €? large Tyrrhenian morphotype' (corresponding to the neotype, but not assayed herein) with the assayed â €? small morphotype'.
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  • 17
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 3 pp.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-26
    Description: Investigating deep water column biodiversity and ecology of the Cape Verde Islands Weekly report 14/2/2018-21/2/2018
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 18
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 49 (2). pp. 199-208.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-19
    Description: In 1988 and 1989 the occurrence of external diseases in fish from the German part of the Wadden Sea was quantified. Thirty-two stations, located along seven transects including four estuaries, were sampled monthly or at 3-month intervals with shrimp trawlers: more than 124 000 fish were studied. Six percent of the seven dominant fish species of 〉 12 cm length were diseased. In fish species which complete their life cycle in the Wadden Sea (gobies, hooknose, eelpout, sea scorpion) the total disease incidence was below 0.4%. In whiting, plaice and sole it was between 0.5 and 2.5%, while 6–8% of smelt, cod, eel, dab and flounder suffered from external lesions. The incidence of most diseases increased with increasing fish length. Similar geographical patterns in prevalence were observed for: (1) two types of skeletal deformities, (2) lymphocystis in dab and flounder, (3) papillomatosis in smelt and dab and (4) several infectious ulcerative diseases. Most of these ulcerative diseases of cod and flounder occurred on central estuarine stations, suggesting an impact of the relatively low, but greatly variable salinity on disease development. Buccal granulomatosis of smelt and papillomatosis of eels showed the highest incidence in the Elbe estuary as the most heavily polluted region of the Wadden Sea. A causal relationship between disease development and pollution, however, is not yet clear and requires experimental evidence. The disease types found are ranked into three priority groups regarding their indicator value for a pollution monitoring on the basis of fish diseases. There is evidence that the total disease load of fish in the Wadden Sea is higher than in other shallow coastal regions outside the North Sea. Little is known of the effects of these diseases on single fish and fish populations. “Yellow pest” of cod, which was recorded for the first time during this survey, and which occurred with an incidence of up to 14% in single estuarine samples, causes the most serious lesions and is supposed to be lethal. In total, however, the effects of a number of pathogenic parasites on fish survival is considered to be more serious than that of deformities and infectious diseases.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: On November 11, 2017, GEOMAR and INDP celebrated the inauguration of the "Ocean Science Centre Mindelo (OSCM)". After 3 years of planning and construction works the building has now been handed over to science. The tropical and subtropical Northeast Atlantic is a very exciting region for climate research, marine biology, oceanography and many other disciplines. For many years, scientists of the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel have been conducting campaigns in the area. A few years ago, these numerous long-term activities resulted in the planning of a laboratory and workshop building in Mindelo on the Islands of Cabo Verde. The longstanding and spirited cooperation with the Cape Verdean Institute for Fisheries Development, the Instituto Nacional de Desenvolvimento das Pescas (INDP), was an additional driver for this enterprise. About two and a half years ago, the partners were able to start the implementation of the project idea. GEOMAR is contributing a total of 2.5 million euros. The construction comprises a building, equipped with two universal labs, a wet lab, workshops for maintenance and repair of scientific equipment, storage rooms and offices as well as seminar rooms.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: Marine sponges are early-branched metazoans known to harbor dense and diverse microbial communities. Yet the role of the so far uncultivable alphaproteobacterial lineages that populate these sessile invertebrates remains unclear. We applied a sequence composition-dependent binning approach to assemble one Rhodospirillaceae genome from the Spongia officinalis microbial metagenome and contrast its functional features with those of closely related sponge-associated and free-living genomes. Both symbiotic and free-living Rhodospirillaceae shared a suite of common features, possessing versatile carbon, nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus metabolisms. Symbiotic genomes could be distinguished from their free-living counterparts by the lack of chemotaxis and motility traits, enrichment of genes required for the uptake and utilization of organic sulfur compounds—particularly taurine—, higher diversity and abundance of ABC transporters, and a distinct repertoire of genes involved in natural product biosynthesis, plasmid stability, cell detoxification and oxidative stress remediation. These sessile symbionts may more effectively contribute to host fitness via nutrient exchange, and also host detoxification and chemical defense. Considering the worldwide occurrence and high diversity of sponge-associated Rhodospirillaceae verified here using a tailored in silico approach, we suggest that these organisms are not only relevant to holobiont homeostasis but also to nutrient cycling in benthic ecosystems.
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  • 21
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 48 . pp. 195-200.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Earlier work by the second author on the growth of oceanic squids, based on sizefrequency distributions of beaks sampled from sperm whale stomachs and on structural marks on those beaks, showed that these squids apparently had growth rates far in excess of those reported for the fastest-growing fishes, e.g. bluefin tuna. The application of recently developed methods for analysis of length-frequency distributions to some of these earlier data, and new approaches for assessing and comparing the growth performance offish and aquatic invertebrates, suggest the need for a downward revision of these high growth estimates. This is illustrated here with data on Kondakovia longimana (Cephalopoda, Onychoteuthidae) sampled off Durban and Donkergat, South Africa, in the early to mid-1960s.
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  • 22
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  The Auk, 102 (3). pp. 540-549.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-13
    Description: The antarctic krill Euphausia superba forms abundant, well-organized schools in the waters off the Antarctic Peninsula. Mean avian density is 2.6 times greater in waters where krill schools are present than in waters without krill schools. Seabird density is a good predictor of the presence of krill. Seabird density did not correlate with krill density or krill school depth. Disoriented krill routinely were observed swimming near the surface above submerged schools, providing potential prey for surface-feeding birds. Responses of seabird species to the distribution of krill schools varied. The small to medium-size procellariiform species were the best indicators of krill schools; large procellariiforms and coastal species were poor indicators. Pygoscelis penguins occurred at high densities only in the presence of krill schools. These responses are consistent with the constraints imposed by the metabolic requirements and reproductive strategies of each of these groups. Krill schools were detected near the sea surface throughout the day. Correlations between seabird density and the presence of krill during daylight hours suggest that diurnal foraging is important to the seabirds of this region.
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  • 23
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 51 (3). pp. 299-313.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Artificial selection processes associated with harvesting may operate over relatively short time scales in short-lived semelparous species. The ommastrephid squid Illex argentinus on the Patagonian Shelf is the target of a major fishery. Recent work has provided new information on the biological characteristics of squid in this fishery. That information has been utilized in the development of a model of the cohort dynamics and some of the within-seasons selective effects considered. The model results are consistent with earlier data from the shelf fisheries, supporting suggestions that the males nature and migrate earlier towards the spawning grounds than the females. Earlier maturation results in a smaller mean size in the spawning stock, while later maturation results in greater exposure to the fishery and a reduced numbers of individuals surviving to spawn. Under the current fishing regime greater egg production and a larger spermatophoric complex mass for the whole cohort is achieved by relatively late maturation. In general, however, the earlier maturation occurs, the earlier is the peak in total egg production. The within-season pattern of effort expenditure in the fishery can affect not only yield from the fishery but also the reproductive potential of the spawning stock. The management policy adopted for this fishery is likely to be conservative in terms of maintenance of a spawning stock, however, the potential for selective effects is larger and this may affect both yield and reproductive potential. The results are discussed in relation to short- and long-term effects in the fishery and the implications for future research requirements.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: Statolith morphology and microstructure were studied in two common species of panktonic cranchiid squids, Belonella borealis [four juveniles with mantle length (ML) 375–450 mm] and Galiteuthis phyllura (13 paralarvae and juveniles, ML 9–235mm), caught near the bottom and in pelagic layers over the continental slope of Siberia in the northwest Bering Sea. The total number of growth increments within the statoliths ranged from 277 to 294 in B.borealis and from 10 to 209 in G.phyllura. Assuming that these increments were produced daily, both species grow rapidly in length (daily growth rate = 1.13mm day−1 during the first 8–10 months of their juvenile phase in the mesopelagic layers, prior to migration into deeper waters for maturation.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: Continental hyperextension during magma-poor rifting at the Deep Galicia Margin is characterised by a complex pattern of faulting, thin continental fault blocks, and the serpentinisation, with local exhumation, of mantle peridotites along the S-reflector, interpreted as a detachment surface. In order to understand fully the evolution of these features, it is important to image seismically the structure and to model the velocity structure to the greatest resolution possible. Travel-time tomography models have revealed the long-wavelength velocity structure of this hyperextended domain, but are often insufficient to match accurately the short-wavelength structure observed in reflection seismic imaging. Here we demonstrate the application of two-dimensional (2D) time-domain acoustic full-waveform inversion to deep water seismic data collected at the Deep Galicia Margin, in order to attain a high resolution velocity model of continental hyperextension. We have used several quality assurance procedures to assess the velocity model, including comparison of the observed and modelled waveforms, checkerboard tests, testing of parameter and inversion strategy, and comparison with the migrated reflection image. Our final model exhibits an increase in the resolution of subsurface velocities, with particular improvement observed in the westernmost continental fault blocks, with a clear rotation of the velocity field to match steeply dipping reflectors. Across the S-reflector there is a sharpening in the velocity contrast, with lower velocities beneath S indicative of preferential mantle serpentinisation. This study supports the hypothesis that normal faulting acts to hydrate the upper mantle peridotite, observed as a systematic decrease in seismic velocities, consistent with increased serpentinisation. Our results confirm the feasibility of applying the full-waveform inversion method to sparse, deep water crustal datasets.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Processes linked with the genesis, evolution and emplacement of silicic complexes in arcs are still poorly constrained. Of particular interest are the depth of magma production, the relative contribution of crystal fractionation versus crustal partial melting and the timescales involved. The Soufrière Volcanic Complex (SVC) on St Lucia is one of the largest silicic centres in the Lesser Antilles arc. Here we present the results of a detailed mineralogical study, including in situ Sr isotopes in plagioclase and in situ δ18O in dated zircons, of both SVC and Pre-SVC volcanic rocks to place constraints on the processes intrinsic to the development and evolution of the silicic complex. These data suggest that the production of silicic magma in the SVC occurs in two stages. The first stage involves differentiation of mafic magma by crustal assimilation and mineral fractionation in the middle–lower crust of the arc to produce magmas with intermediate compositions. These intermediate magmas are water-rich (∼7 wt %) and have high 87Sr/86Sr, Ba, Sr and La/Sm (∼5) compared with Pre-SVC lavas. Near-constant trace element and isotopic compositions throughout the SVC lifespan indicate that the same process was persistent over the last 600 kyr. In the second stage, the intermediate magmas are transferred to a shallower and more differentiated chamber (∼6 km depth). During ascent, any crystals or xenocrysts residual from stage one in the deeper chamber become fully resorbed and the magma crystallizes calcic amphibole microphenocrysts, followed by anorthite-rich plagioclase close to or at the water saturation depth. During mixing upon recharge within the shallow chamber, anorthite-rich plagioclase from the recharging magma is partially resorbed; so are the crystals in equilibrium with the resident differentiated magma. The recharge event probably causes chamber-wide convection. Mixing is thought to trigger eruption of the silicic complex magmas.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2017-12-19
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  • 29
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR News, 2017 (03). pp. 10-11.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-18
    Description: Seit mehr als 25 Jahren lernen, arbeiten und leben Meereswissenschaftlerinnen und Meereswissenschaftler auf dem Kieler Forschungsschiff ALKOR. 500 Expeditionen hat das 55 Meter lange Schiff mittlerweile absolviert. Es ist neben der POSEIDON das zweite „mittelgroße“ Forschungsschiff, das am GEOMAR stationiert ist.
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  • 30
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, 43 pp.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Eukaryotic phytoplankton exhibit an enormous species richness, displaying a range of phylogenetic, morphological and physiological diversity. Yet, until recently, very little was known about the diversity, genetic variation and evolutionary processes within species and populations. An approach to explore this diversity and to understand evolution of phytoplankton is to use population genetics as a conceptual framework and methodology. Here, we discuss the patterns, processes and questions that population genetic studies have revealed in eukaryotic phytoplankton. First, we describe the main biological processes generating genetic variation. We specifically discuss the importance of life-cycle complexity for genetic and phenotypic diversity and consider how such diversity can be maintained during blooms when rapid asexual proliferation dominates. Next, we explore how genetic diversity is partitioned over time and space, with a focus on the processes shaping this structure, in particular selection and genetic exchange. Our aim is also to show how population genetics can be used to make inferences about realized dispersal and sexual recombination, as these processes are so difficult to study directly. Finally, we highlight important open questions and suggest promising avenues for future studies that will be made possible by new sequencing technologies
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  • 32
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 74 (1). pp. 102-111.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Marine spatial planning (MSP) is considered a valuable tool in the ecosystem-based management of marine areas. Predictive modelling may be applied in the MSP framework to obtain spatially explicit information about biodiversity patterns. The growing number of statistical approaches used for this purpose implies the urgent need for comparisons between different predictive techniques. In this study, we evaluated the performance of selected machine learning and regression-based methods that were applied for modelling fish community indices. We hypothesized that habitat features can influence fish assemblage and investigated the effect of environmental gradients on demersal fish diversity (species richness and Shannon–Weaver Index). We used fish data from the Baltic International Trawl Surveys (2001–2014) and maps of six potential predictors: bottom salinity, depth, seabed slope, growth season bottom temperature, seabed sediments and annual mean bottom current velocity. We compared the performance of six alternative modelling approaches: generalized linear models, generalized additive models, multivariate adaptive regression splines, support vector machines, boosted regression trees and random forests. We applied repeated 10-fold cross-validation, using accuracy as the measure of model quality. Finally, we selected random forest as the best performing algorithm and implemented it for the spatial prediction of fish diversity from the Baltic Proper to the Kattegat. To obtain information on the data reliability and confidence of the developed models, which are essential for MSP, we estimated the uncertainty of predictions with standard deviation of predictions obtained from all the trees in the ensemble random forest method. We showed how state-of-the-art predictive techniques, based on easily available data and simple Geographic Information System tools, can be used to obtain reliable spatial information about fish diversity. Our comparative work highlighted the potential of machine learning method to reduce prediction error in modelling of demersal fish diversity in the framework of MSP.
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  • 33
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    GEOMAR
    In:  Alkor-Berichte, AL478 . GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 13 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: Dates of Cruise: 16.05. – 28.05.2016 Areas of Research: Physical, chemical, biological and fishery oceanography Port Calls: Klaipeda, Lithuania, 21.05. – 23.05.2016
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  • 34
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Geophysical Journal International, 208 (1). pp. 449-467.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The Mozambique Ridge, a prominent basement high in the southwestern Indian Ocean, consists of four major geomorphological segments associated with numerous phases of volcanic activity in the Lower Cretaceous. The nature and origin of the Mozambique Ridge have been intensely debated with one hypothesis suggesting a Large Igneous Province origin. High-resolution seismic reflection data reveal a large number of extrusion centres with a random distribution throughout the southern Mozambique Ridge and the nearby Transkei Rise. Intrabasement reflections emerge from the extrusion centres and are interpreted to represent massive lava flow sequences. Such lava flow sequences are characteristic of eruptions leading to the formation of continental and oceanic flood basalt provinces, hence supporting a Large Igneous Province origin of the Mozambique Ridge. We observe evidence for widespread post-sedimentary magmatic activity that we correlate with a southward propagation of the East African Rift System. Based on our volumetric analysis of the southern Mozambique Ridge we infer a rapid sequential emplacement between ∼131 and ∼125 Ma, which is similar to the short formation periods of other Large Igneous Provinces like the Agulhas Plateau.
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  • 35
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  The Auk, 107 (4). pp. 678-688.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-13
    Description: Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) feeding in the northern Bering Sea produce prey-rich mud plumes that provide ephemeral foraging opportunities for seabirds. Approximately 67% of all gray whales were attended by birds. In four whale-associating bird species (Northern Fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis; Red Phalarope, Phalaropus fulicaria; Black-legged Kitti-wake, Rissa tridactyla; and Thick-billed Murre, Uria lomvia), from 17 to 87% of all individuals that we observed on the water or foraging were in the whales' mud plumes. The combined density of these same four species was strongly correlated with whale density over a broad range of spatial scales. The whale-associating seabirds exhibited species-specific patterns of foraging behavior at plumes, including differences in mean group size, mean residence time, and patterns of movement between plumes. Birds tended to form larger groups and to form more mixed-species flocks in association with whales. The association of marine birds with gray whales in the Bering Sea provides a model system for examining seabird interactions at fine-scale oceanographic patches and demonstrates the importance of these patches in shaping patterns of seabird distribution and behavior.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The Nifonea submarine volcano rises 1000 m above the seafloor of the Vate Trough back-arc basin behind the New Hebrides island arc. This large volcanic edifice has a caldera of ∼8 km diameter and is connected to two ∼20 km long volcanic rift zones in the back-arc basin. We present new chemical and isotope data for volcanic glasses and whole-rocks from both the volcano and its rift zones. Lavas from Nifonea volcano show an evolution towards more incompatible element enrichment, with the most enriched lavas being the youngest eruption products on the caldera floor. These are products of significant fractional crystallization, show minor contamination by hydrothermal fluids (〈0·3%) and reflect mixing of melts derived from depleted upper mantle and melts from an enriched source similar to those occurring in the North Fiji Basin. The enrichment in Nb of these lavas is comparable with that of some lavas from the New Hebrides island arc (e.g. Mota Lava island), where these coexist with typical island arc basalts. The lavas erupted along the rift zones in the Vate Trough back-arc basin are relatively depleted in incompatible elements, indicating melting of depleted upper mantle with a minor addition of a sediment-derived fluid. Our observations suggest that the mantle beneath Vate Trough is heterogeneous on a small scale (〈20 km) and that the occurrence of these enriched and fertile mantle portions has a stronger control on melting processes than the influx from the subducting slab, as all samples were recovered at a similar distance from the trench.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2017-08-11
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  • 38
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    GEOMAR
    In:  Alkor-Berichte, AL493 . GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 20 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: Dates of Cruise: 13.05. – 29.05.2017 Areas of Research: Physical, chemical, biological and fishery oceanography Port Calls: Visby, Sweden, 19.05. – 21.05.2016
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  • 39
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 39 (5). pp. 772-780.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The influence of winter on the selection of dominant taxa for the phytoplankton spring bloom was studied in batch culture experiments. Different natural phytoplankton assemblages from different phases of the temperate zone winter were exposed to varying periods of darkness (0, 6/7, 13 and 19 weeks) followed by a re-exposure to saturating light intensity for 14 days to experimentally simulate the onset of spring. The results showed that dark incubation has a strong effect on shaping the phytoplankton community composition. Many taxa disappeared in the absolute darkness. Dark survival ability might be an important contributing factor for the success of diatoms in spring. Different phytoplankton starting assemblages were dominated by the same bloom-forming diatoms, Skeletonema marinoi and Thalassosira spp., after dark incubation for only 6 weeks, irrespective of the high dissimilarities between phytoplankton communities. The growth capacity of surviving phytoplankton is almost unimpaired by darkness. Similar growth rates as that before darkness could be resumed for the surviving taxa with a potential lag time of 1–7 days dependent on taxon and the duration of darkness.
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  • 40
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    American Chemical Society (ACS)
    In:  Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, 56 (44). pp. 12755-12762.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The discharges from industrial processes constitute the main source of copper contamination in aqueous ecosystems. In this study we investigated the capacity of different types of biochar (derived from chicken manure, eucalyptus, corncob, olive mill and pine sawdust) to remove copper from aqueous solution in a continuous-flow system. The flow rate of the system strongly influenced the amount of copper retained. The adsorption to the corncob biochar varied from 5.51 to 3.48 mg Cu g-1 as the flux decreased from 13 to 2.5 mL min-1. The physicochemical characteristics of biochar determine the copper retention capacity and the underlying immobilization mechanisms. Biochars with high inorganic contents retain the largest amounts of copper and may be suitable for using in water treatment systems to remove heavy metals. The copper retention capacity of the biochars ranged between ~1.3 and 26 mg g-1 and varied in the following order: chicken manure 〉 olive mill 〉〉 corncob 〉 eucalyptus 〉 sawdust pine.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2018-01-19
    Description: Diese Broschüre und die gleichnamige Ausstellung befassen sich mit der Entwicklung des Echolots, für das der Kieler Physiker und Unternehmer Alexander Behm im Jahr 1913 das erste Patent erhielt. Erfahren Sie mehr über die Geschichte der Tiefenmessung im Ozean – von den ersten Handloten im alten Ägypten über die dampfgetriebenen Lotmaschinen des 19. Jahrhunderts, der Entwicklung der ozeanischen Tiefenkarten bis hin zur heutigen Vermessung des Meeresbodens mit modernen Fächerecholoten.
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  • 42
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 74 (7). pp. 1855-1864.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: The general positive effect of warmer winters on the abundance of small-sized zooplankton in the following spring and early summer has been reported from different parts of the Baltic Sea, but the mechanism of this link is not clear. Although causal links cannot be deduced with confidence from observational data, sufficiently detailed analyses can nevertheless provide insights to the potential mechanisms. We present an example of such an analysis, scrutinizing the effects of winter and spring hydroclimate on the abundance of small-sized dominant calanoid copepods (Eurytemora affinis and Acartia spp.), using data from 2080 zooplankton samples collected over 55 years (1957–2012) from a shallow coastal habitat (Pärnu Bay, Gulf of Riga) in the Baltic Sea. Our results indicated that the milder winters brought about higher abundances, and reduced seasonality of small-sized copepods, whereas ambient sea surface temperature (SST) mostly affected the relative abundance of adult stages. The sliding window correlation tests revealed temporal shifts in the effects of controlling variables: with the continuous increase in SST, the effect of winter temperature on the abundance of Acartia spp. weakened. In contrast, E. affinis was consistently affected by SST, but the effect of winter temperature was more pronounced during the period of on average colder winters.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: Overfishing and rapid environmental shifts pose severe challenges to the resilience and viability of marine fish populations. To develop and implement measures that enhance species’ adaptive potential to cope with those pressures while, at the same time, ensuring sustainable exploitation rates is part of the central goal of fisheries management. Here, we argue that a combination of biophysical modelling and population genomic assessments offer ideal management tools to define stocks, their physical connectivity and ultimately, their short-term adaptive potential. To date, biophysical modelling has often been confined to fisheries ecology whereas evolutionary hypotheses remain rarely considered. When identified, connectivity patterns are seldom explored to understand the evolution and distribution of adaptive genetic variation, a proxy for species’ evolutionary potential. Here, we describe a framework that expands on the conventional seascape genetics approach by using biophysical modelling and population genomics. The goals are to identify connectivity patterns and selective pressures, as well as putative adaptive variants directly responding to the selective pressures and, ultimately, link both to define testable hypotheses over species response to shifting ecological conditions and overexploitation.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2018-02-20
    Description: Innate immunity is the front line of self-defense against microbial infection. After searching for natural substances that regulate innate immunity using an ex vivo Drosophila culture system, we identified a novel dimeric chromanone, gonytolide A, as an innate immune promoter from the fungus Gonytrichum sp. along with gonytolides B and C. Gonytolide A also increased TNF-α-stimulated production of IL-8 in human umbilical vein endothelial cells.
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  • 45
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 15 (7). pp. 867-872.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-05
    Description: Mortality of two dogs, after exposure to water of a brackish lake on the German North Sea coast in 1990, is considered to be caused by a toxic Nodularia spumigena Mertens bloom.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: This study presents a new method (LBB) for the analysis of length frequency data from commercial catches. LBB works for species that grow throughout their lives, such as most commercially-important fish and invertebrates, and requires no input in addition to length frequency data. It estimates asymptotic length, length at first capture, relative natural mortality, and relative fishing mortality. Standard fisheries equations can then be used to approximate current exploited biomass relative to unexploited biomass. In addition, these parameters allow the estimation of length at first capture that would maximize catch and biomass for a given fishing effort, and estimation of a proxy for the relative biomass capable of producing maximum sustainable yields. Relative biomass estimates of LBB were not significantly different from the “true” values in simulated data and were similar to independent estimates from full stock assessments. LBB also presents a new indicator for assessing whether an observed size structure is indicative of a healthy stock. LBB results will obviously be misleading if the length frequency data do not represent the size composition of the exploited size range of the stock or if length frequencies resulting from the interplay of growth and mortality are masked by strong recruitment pulses.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2016-11-30
    Description: We studied the combined direct physiological and indirect food web effects of ocean acidification on herring larvae inside pelagic mesocosms. A natural plankton community of the Gullmarsfjord, Sweden was enclosed in the Kiel Off-Shore Mesocosms for future Ocean Simulations (KOSMOS) for 113 days from March to June 2013 at ambient and projected end-of-the-century CO2 levels (~760 µatm pCO2). Herring eggs were introduced into the mesocosms, where they hatched in mid of May. The larvae developed inside the mesocosms for ~6 weeks, feeding on prey organisms that experienced treatment CO2 levels for ~9 weeks. This video is meant as an illustration of the herring larvae«s performance inside our mesocosm units.
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  • 48
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 12 (5). pp. 1045-1057.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: The Rhynchoteuthion larvae of Illex argentinus resulting from summer spawning in North Patagonic shelf waters, its distribution and abundance, are described in this paper. The material was collected in the Argentine Sea (35–55°S) by means of plankton nets. The research cruises were made by the R/V Shinkai Maru and the R/V Walther Herwig during the period April 1978 to April 1979. The most important spawning ground of the summer spawning subpopulation is found in continental-shelf waters (between 43 and 46°S) during the period December-February. This area was established on the basis of both ripe (December) and spent females (February). The larvae which were caught during the same period, especially in March, confirmed the spawning area of this demographic unit. The larvae showed the length of the mantle (ML) to be from 1.2 to 6.5 mm. Tentacles were splitting in specimens from 5.0 to 6.5 mm ML (transition stage). When 7.0 mm ML or more, all specimens were juveniles and had their tentacles completely separated. Larvae were characterized as type C, following the proposal of Sato (1973) and Sato and Sawada (1974) in the Bulletin of the Shizuoka Prefectural Fisheries Experimental Station.
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  • 49
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 49 (2). pp. 175-183.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: A joint research cruise (Japan-Argentina-Uruguay) was carried out in the South-western Atlantic during August-September 1989 in order to study the winter-spawning and hatchery areas of Illex argentinus, and also the migration pattern of the juveniles towards the continental shelf. A few Rhynchoteuthion larvae were found in subtropical waters of the Brazil Current, next to the Brazil-Malvinas confluence, and in the frontal zone with shelf water, but never at temperatures below 14°C. Large numbers of juveniles found in subantarctic waters (6–10°C) on the shelf were probably migrating southward from their hatchery grounds following the zooplankton concentrations on which they were feeding.
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  • 50
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 50 (4). pp. 393-403.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Ripe egg dimensions in the squid genus Illex are close to the minimum for cephalopods. The average diameter varies significantly depending on species (0.77–0.82 mm in I. coindeti , 0.75–0.88 mm in I. illecebrosus , and 0.96–1.04 mm in I. argentinus ), on geographical distribution intraspecifically, e.g. I. argentinus (0.96–0.97 mm in the shelf groups and 1.04 mm in the slope oceanic group), and between pre-spawning and spawning females of the summer-spawning shelf group of I. argentinus (0.97 and 0.92 mm, respectively). The potential fecundity (PF), defined as total oocyte stock both in the ovary and oviducts, depends on mantle length (ML in each species. It varies from 90 000 (ML = 150–160 mm) to 800 000 (ML = 230–250 mm) in I. coindeti , from 200 000 to 630 000 (ML = 220–280 mm) in I. illecebrosus , and from 75 000 (ML = 150–170 mm) to 1 200 000 (ML = 360–380 mm) in I. argentinus . It is possible to estimate the actual value of PF shortly before vitellogenesis begins and up to a start of spawning, when the diameter of the smallest oocytes exceeds 0.05 mm. The summer-spawning shelf females of I. argentinus release about of 70% of PF. Their spawning is intermittent and ripe egg production decreases over time with only a 50% replacement of the initial stock of vitelline oocytes and a decreasing volume of eggs at each release. Feeding activity decreases and the mantle wall and internal organs shrink once spawning commences. In spent animals, a degeneration of both vitelline and protoplasmic oocytes occurs. The squids genus Illex is one of typical r-strategists among the cephalopods.
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  • 51
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 2 pp.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-07
    Description: Wochenbericht der Forschungsreise mit R.V. „Alkor“ AL 493 13.05.2017 – 20.05.2017
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Marine sponges (phylum Porifera) are a diverse, phylogenetically deep-branching clade known for forming intimate partnerships with complex communities of microorganisms. To date, 16S rRNA gene sequencing studies have largely utilised different extraction and amplification methodologies to target the microbial communities of a limited number of sponge species, severely limiting comparative analyses of sponge microbial diversity and structure. Here, we provide an extensive and standardised dataset that will facilitate sponge microbiome comparisons across large spatial, temporal and environmental scales. Samples from marine sponges (n = 3569 specimens), seawater (n = 370), marine sediments (n = 65) and other environments (n = 29) were collected from different locations across the globe. This dataset incorporates at least 269 different sponge species, including several yet unidentified taxa. The V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was amplified and sequenced from extracted DNA using standardised procedures. Raw sequences (total of 1.1 billion sequences) were processed and clustered with a) a standard protocol using QIIME closed-reference picking resulting in 39,543 Operational Taxonomic Units (OTU) at 97% sequence identity, b) a de novo protocol using Mothur resulting in 518,246 OTUs, and c) a new high-resolution Deblur protocol resulting in 83,908 unique bacterial sequences. Abundance tables, representative sequences, taxonomic classifications and metadata are provided. This dataset represents a comprehensive resource of sponge-associated microbial communities based on 16S rRNA gene sequences that can be used to address overarching hypotheses regarding host-associated prokaryotes, including host-specificity, convergent evolution, environmental drivers of microbiome structure and the sponge-associated rare biosphere.
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  • 53
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 4 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: 13.4.-28.4.2017 Physical, chemical, biological research and fishery oceanography This multidisciplinary cruise extended a long-term data series on (eco-)system composition and functioning of the Baltic Sea, with a focus on the deeper basins. The series has been collected in similar form since 1986. A key characteristic of the cruise is the integration of oceanographic and biological information to enhance understanding of environmental and (fish) population fluctuations, and evolutionary processes in this system. The resulting datasets and samples are an essential component of the international EU project BONUS BIO-C3 coordinated by GEOMAR. The spatial focus lay on the Bornholm Basin (the most important spawning area of Baltic cod), but also included the Western Baltic Sea, Arkona and Gotland Basin, Gdansk Deep, and Stolpe Trench. Specific investigations included a detailed hydrological survey (oxygen, salinity, temperature) of the Bornholm Basin, plankton surveys (zoo- and ichthyplankton, with the goal to determine the composition and the abundance and vertical and horizontal distribution of species, and to take samples for later measurements of nutritional condition), and pelagic fishery hauls for clupeid and gadoid fish. The latter served to determine stock structure, gonadal maturation, stomach contents, and egg production of sprat and cod, and to sample tissue for later genetic analyses and otoliths for age estimatation of individual cod. The abundance and distribution of fish species in the investigated area was also assessed with hydroacoustic methods. Additional cruise components were: (i) cod gonad sampling for histological and fecundity studies; (ii) vertically resolved phytoplankton and zooplankton sampling for studies of plankton phenology. (iii) vertically and spatially resolved sampling of protist communities for the characteriziation of community structure changes along the salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea.
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  • 54
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Geophysical Journal International, 212 (1). pp. 333-344.
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: In this study, the complex frequency-shifted perfectly matched layer (CFS-PML) in stretching Cartesian coordinates, is successfully applied to three-dimensional (3D) frequency-domain marine controlled-source electromagnetic (CSEM) field modelling. The Dirichlet boundary, which is usually used within the traditional framework of EM modeling algorithms, assumes the electric or magnetic field values are zero at the boundaries. This requires the boundaries be sufficiently far away from the sources in the area of interest. To mitigate the boundary artifacts, a large modelling area may be necessary even though cell sizes are allowed to grow toward the boundaries due to the diffusion of the electromagnetic wave propagation. Compared with the conventional Dirichlet boundary, the PML boundary is preferred as the modelling area of interest could be restricted to the target region and only a few absorbing layers surrounding can effectively depress the artificial boundary effect without losing the numerical accuracy. Furthermore, for joint inversion of seismic and marine CSEM data, if we used the PML for CSEM field simulation instead of the conventional Dirichlet, the modeling area for these two different geophysical data collected from the same survey area could the same, which is convenient for joint inversion grid matching. We apply the CFS-PML boundary to 3D marine CSEM modelling by using the staggered finite-difference (SFD) discretization. Numerical test indicates that the modeling algorithm using the CFS-PML also shows good accuracy compared to the Dirichlet. Furthermore, the modeling algorithm using the CFS-PML shows advantages in computational time and memory saving than that using the Dirichlet boundary. For the 3D example in this study, the memory saving using the PML is nearly 42 % and the time saving is around 48% compared to using the Dirichlet.
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  • 55
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    Publication Date: 2017-12-13
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
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  • 59
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 2 pp.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-05
    Description: Investigating deep water column biodiversity and ecology of the Cape Verde Islands Weekly report 21/2/2018-1/3/2018
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  • 60
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    GEOMAR
    In:  Alkor-Berichte, AL491 . GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 10 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/book
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: AtlantOS aims to improve ocean observing by strengthening international collaboration, sharing of ocean observing and by promoting engagement and innovation. The vision is to create together with the ocean community a coordinated, efficient, sustainable and purposeful system.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2018-03-19
    Description: Total biomass and biomass of large taxonomic groups (polychaetes, molluscs, crustaceans, echinoderms) and species diversity of the macrofauna were determined for almost 200 North Sea stations sampled synoptically by seven vessels during Spring 1986 and for 120 additional stations sampled in earlier years by the Marine Laboratory in Aberdeen. There exists a clear and significant decreasing trend in biomass with latitude, both in total biomass and for the different taxonomic groups. Apart from latitude, sediment composition and chlorophyll a content of the sediment also infuence total biomass and biomass of most groups significantly. Biomass increases consistently in finer sediments and sediments with a higher chlorophyll a content. The same trends are found for the results within laboratories. Some interaction exists, indicating weak laboratory and zonal effects. Diversity, as measured by Hill's diversity index N1 = (exp H′) shows a clear and significant trend with latitude. Towards the north of the North Sea diversity increases considerably. The trend is also found for laboratories separately and is everywhere equally strong. Also longitude and depth show an effect on diversity. Sediment variables have no clear influence on diversity. Other diversity measures show the same trend but are more variable than N1,. Total density tends to increase towards the north, but sediment related variables have a larger influence. Mean individual weight becomes considerably smaller towards the northern part of the North Sea.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: In 1986 participants of the Benthos Ecology Working Group of ICES conducted a synoptic mapping of the infauna of the southern and central North Sea. Together with a mapping of the infauna of the northern North Sea by Eleftheriou and Basford (1989) this provides the database for the description of the benthic infauna of the whole North Sea in this paper. Division of the infauna into assemblages by TWINSPAN analysis separated northern assemblages from southern assemblages along the 70 m depth contour. Assemblages were further separated by the 30, 50 m and 100 m depth contour as well as by the sediment type. In addition to widely distributed species, cold water species do not occur further south than the northern edge of the Dogger Bank, which corresponds to the 50 m depth contour. Warm water species were not found north of the 100 m depth contour. Some species occur on all types of sediment but most are restricted to a special sedimentand therefore these species are limited in their distribution. The factors structuring species distributions and assemblages seem to be temperature, the influence of different water masses, e.g. Atlantic water, the type of sediment and the food supply to the benthos. Eleftheriou, A. and Basford, D. J. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK, 69: 123–143.
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  • 64
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 22 . pp. 2015-2038.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: Long-term dynamics (1959–1997) of the copepod species Pseudocalanus elongatus, Temora longicornis, Acartia spp. and Centropages hamatus, as well as the taxonomic group of cladocerans, are described for the open sea areas of the central Baltic Sea. Differences between areas, i.e. Bornholm Basin, Gdansk Deep and Gotland Basin, as well as between 5 year periods, were investigated by means of Analysis of Variance (ANOVA). No significant differences in mesozooplankton biomass between areas were found. On the other hand, clear time-trends could be demonstrated and related to salinity and temperature, with P.elongatus biomass mainly dependent on salinity and T.longicornis, Acartia spp. and cladocerans biomasses dependent, to a large extent, on thermal conditions. Decreasing salinities since the early 1980s due to a lack of major inflows of highly saline water from the North Sea and increased river run-off, both triggered by meteorological conditions, obviously caused a decrease in biomass of P.elongatus. Contrarily, the standing stocks of the other abundant copepod species and cladocerans followed, to a large degree, the temperature development and showed, in general, an increase. The shift in species composition during this period is considered to be a reason for decreasing growth rates of Baltic herring (Clupea harengus) since the early 1980s, and for sprat (Sprattus sprattus) since the early 1990s. Generally, it is suggested that low mesozooplankton biomasses in the 1990s were caused, at least partially, by amplified predation by clupeid fish stocks.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2019-01-22
    Description: The present study analyses the distribution of cephalopod paralarvae off the Portuguese coast. The effects of temporal and physical variables on Loligo vulgaris, Octopus vulgaris, sepiolid and ommastrephid abundances are analysed with generalized linear models. Their distribution patterns are discussed in relation to mesoscale features, including currents, thermal fronts and coastal upwelling cross-shelf transport, prevailing in the western Iberia upwelling system. Paralarvae of the neritic species occur during a considerably extended period of the year with two or three abundance peaks within the highly productive upwelling system of the western Portuguese coast and contrasting with the Gulf of Cadiz area. Temperature and upwelling were shown to be the most important variables in modulating seasonality and distribution of these paralarvae. The influence of the physical environment is particularly pronounced for the paralarvae of O. vulgaris, following distinct patterns according to the oceanography of the western Iberia and the Gulf of Cadiz systems. The paralarvae of oceanic species, which in many cases have their northern limit of distribution at these latitudes, were mainly found in the southern part of the sampling area. The distribution of these species indicates that the prevailing oceanographic features of the Gulf of Cadiz system, especially fronts, together with temperature act as boundaries to geographic dispersal, contributing to an area of high cephalopod biodiversity in the southern Portuguese waters.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Post-collisional magmatism in the southern Iberian and northwestern African continental margins contains important clues for the understanding of a possible causal connection between movements in the Earth's upper mantle, the uplift of continental lithosphere and the origin of circum-Mediterranean igneous activity. Systematic geochemical and geochronological studies (major and trace element, Sr–Nd–Pb-isotope analysis and laser 40Ar/39Ar-age dating) on igneous rocks provide constraints for understanding the post-collisional history of the southern Iberian and northwestern African continental margins. Two groups of magmatic rocks can be distinguished: (1) an Upper Miocene to Lower Pliocene (8·2–4·8 Ma), Si–K-rich group including high-K (calc-alkaline) and shoshonitic series rocks; (2) an Upper Miocene to Pleistocene (6·3–0·65 Ma), Si-poor, Na-rich group including basanites and alkali basalts to hawaiites and tephrites. Mafic samples from the Si–K-rich group generally show geochemical affinities with volcanic rocks from active subduction zones (e.g. Izu–Bonin and Aeolian island arcs), whereas mafic samples from the Si-poor, Na-rich group are geochemically similar to lavas found in intraplate volcanic settings derived from sub-lithospheric mantle sources (e.g. Canary Islands). The transition from Si-rich (subduction-related) to Si-poor (intraplate-type) magmatism between 6·3 Ma (first alkali basalt) and 4·8 Ma (latest shoshonite) can be observed both on a regional scale and in individual volcanic systems. Si–K-rich and Si-poor igneous rocks from the continental margins of southern Iberia and northwestern Africa are, respectively, proposed to have been derived from metasomatized subcontinental lithosphere and sub-lithospheric mantle that was contaminated with plume material. A three-dimensional geodynamic model for the westernmost Mediterranean is presented in which subduction of oceanic lithosphere is inferred to have caused continental-edge delamination of subcontinental lithosphere associated with upwelling of plume-contaminated sub-lithospheric mantle and lithospheric uplift. This process may operate worldwide in areas where subduction-related and intraplate-type magmatism are spatially and temporally associated.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2016-03-16
    Description: GEOMAR TV berichtet über den Besuch des Bundespräsidenten Joachim Gauck am GEOMAR am 22. März 2013. Vorträge und ein Rundgang vermittelten dem prominenten Gast Eindrücke von Forschungsarbeiten des GEOMAR zu Rohstoffen aus dem Meer, der Rolle des Ozeans im Klimawandel und innovativer Meerestechnik.
    Type: Video , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2016-03-15
    Description: GAME - Global Approach by Modular Experiments is in an international training programme that combines applied research with training for young scientists. Every year, parallel research projects on current ecological issues are organised at different locations around the world. The research is carried out by students working in bi-national pairs and supervised by scientists from GAME’s partner institutes. The unique GAME projects enable generalizable insights into urgent ecological issues. At the same time GAME links GEOMAR with numerous partner institutes worldwide and creates a global network for the sustainable exchange of scientific knowledge. In 2014, the participants investigate if microplastic is able to harm marine animals. In a short film, they report about their life and work.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2019-02-01
    Description: Ocean acidification is an escalating environmental issue and associated changes in the ocean carbonate system have implications for many calcifying organisms. The present study followed the growth of Sepia officinalis from early-stage embryos, through hatching, to 7-week-old juveniles. Responses of cuttlefish to elevated pCO(2) (hypercapnia) were investigated to test the impacts of near-future and extreme ocean acidification conditions on growth, developmental time, oxygen consumption, and yolk utilization as proxies for individual fitness. We further examined gross morphological characteristics of the internal calcareous cuttlebone to determine whether embryonically secreted shell lamellae are impacted by environmental hypercapnia. Embryonic growth was reduced and hatching delayed under elevated pCO(2), both at environmentally relevant levels (0.14 kPa pCO(2) similar to predicted ocean conditions in 2100) and extreme conditions (0.40 kPa pCO(2)). Comparing various metrics from control and intermediate treatments generally showed no significant difference in experimental measurements. Yet, results from the high pCO(2) treatment showed significant changes compared with controls and revealed a consistent general trend across the three treatment levels. The proportion of animal mass contributed by the cuttlebone increased in both elevated pCO(2) treatments. Gross cuttlebone morphology was affected under such conditions and cuttlebones of hypercapnic individuals were proportionally shorter. Embryonic shell morphology was maintained consistently in all treatments, despite compounding hypercapnia in the perivitelline fluid; however, post-hatching, hypercapnic animals developed denser cuttlebone laminae in shorter cuttlebones. Juvenile cuttlefish in acidified environments thus experience lower growth and yet increased calcification of their internal shell. The results of this study support recent findings that early cuttlefish life stages are more vulnerable towards hypercapnia than juveniles and adults, which may have negative repercussions on the biological fitness of cuttlefish hatchlings in future oceans.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2016-03-15
    Description: As a large sink, the ocean absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. But in sea water, the gas reacts to produce carbonic acid - a threat for organisms building their shells and skeletons from calcium carbonate. Der Ozean nimmt als gigantische Senke Kohlendioxid aus der Atmosphäre auf. Doch im Wasser regiert das Gas zu Kohlensäure - eine Gefahr für Organismen, die ihre Schalen und Skellette aus Kalk aufbauen.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2016-06-02
    Description: Auf einer Expedition mit dem deutschen Forschungsschiff POSEIDON und dem Tauchboot JAGO haben Wissenschaftler der Universität von Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC), des Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Centro Oceanográfico de Canarias (IEO) und des GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrums für Ozeanforschung Kiel erstmals den untermeerischen Vulkan vor der Kanaren-Insel El Hierro mit ihren eigenen Augen untersucht. Neben Proben von Gesteinen und Flüssigkeiten aus dem Vulkankrater brachten sie einmalige Unterwasseraufnahmen mit an die Oberfläche. An international team of scientists has been investigating the active submarine volcano at El Hierro in the Canary Islands. Using a manned submersible, they have brought unique underwater footage and samples back to the surface.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2016-03-17
    Description: Sauerstoffminimumzonen stehen im Mittelpunkt der dritten Folge von GEOMAR.tv. Mit Hilfe eines Spurenstoffs ermitteln Wissenschaftler auf einer Expedition von Bord der METEOR, ob Wirbel und Strömungen dem Meer vor den Kapverden neuen Atem einhauchen können. Schüler beschäftigen sich in der Sommerschule am GEOMAR mit Sauerstoffmangel in der Ostsee. Außerdem: Eine Bilanz zum Ende des Langzeit-Experiments zur Ozeanversauerung, Forschungen zur Biodiversität in der Ostsee und als News: Open Ship auf der Kieler Woche sowie ALKOR und POSEIDON auf der Förde.
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  • 73
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    GEOMAR
    In:  [Video]
    Publication Date: 2016-03-17
    Description: Neues entdecken, verstehen und auch komplizierte Dinge einfach erklären, das ist das Metier des Physikers und Wissenschaftsjournalisten Ranga Yogeshwar. So vermittelt er auch komplexe wissenschaftliche Sachverhalte einer breiten Öffentlichkeit. In Anerkennung dieser besonderen Leistungen wurde ihm vom GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung Kiel und der Deutschen Bank der Meerespreis 2013 verliehen. Ranga Yogeshwar erhielt die mit 10.000 Euro dotierte, von der Deutschen Bank gestiftete Auszeichnung im Rahmen einer Festveranstaltung am 21. Mai in Gegenwart des schleswig-holsteinischen Ministerpräsidenten Torsten Albig. Die Laudatio hält der international renommierte Klimaforscher Professor Mojib Latif.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Die fünfte Folge des Magazins GEOMAR.tv stellt das Technik- und Logistikzentrum des GEOMAR vor. Der wissenschaftliche Leiter Dr. Olaf Pfannkuche nimmt Moderatorin Annika de Buhr mit auf einen Rundgang, der technische Leiter Ralf Schwarz entwickelt mit Ingenieuren und Forschern ein neues Messgerät und Dr. Friedrich Abegg stellt die Tauchroboter ROV KIEL 6000 und ROV PHOCA vor. Weitere Beiträge berichten über Sauerstoffminimumzonen in der Ostsee und die ARENA -- ein Planetarium für die Tiefsee. Als News: Der Helmholtz-Tag der Schülerlabore, Exponate des GEOMAR im Deutschen Museum München und ABYSS auf der Suche nach einem neuen Hydrothermalfeld.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2016-03-15
    Description: MEDIZIN AUS DEM MEER: DAS KIELER WIRKSTOFF-ZENTRUM KiWiZ Organismen, die auf Algen und Schwämmen im Meer leben, produzieren Wirkstoffe, die bei der Entwicklung von Medikamenten nützlich sein können. Liegt das Mittel gegen Krebs im Ozean? THE KIEL CENTRE FOR MARINE NATURAL PRODUCTS KiWiZ Marine microorganisms living on algae and sponges produce substances that may one day help to develop new medicines. Maybe even the cure for cancer can be found in the ocean.
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  • 76
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    GEOMAR
    In:  [Video]
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Mit der Serie GEOMAR TV berichtet das GEOMAR über seine aktuellen Forschungsthemen Folge 1 widmet sich der SONNE-Ausfahrt zum Manihiki-Plateau im Westpazifik, dem Langzeit-Experiment zur Ozeanversauerung mit den KOSMOS Mesokosmen in Westschweden und Forschungsarbeiten zur Auswirkungen des Klimawandels auf Lebewesen am Boden der Ostsee mit den Kieler Benthokosmen. Außerdem wird JAGO vorgestellt - Deutschlands einziges bemanntes Forschungstauchboot. Weitere News: ROV HYBIS und der Bildband über den Sonderforschungsbereich zu Subduktionszonen "Am Puls der Erde"
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  • 77
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 68 (5). pp. 813-822.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: In 1999, marine protected areas (MPAs) were implemented along the west coast of the Big Island of Hawaii, closing ~35% of the coastline to aquarium fishing. Catch per unit effort and total catch of the most commonly targeted fish, yellow tang (Zebrasoma flavescens), have increased since the implementation of the MPAs, yet its abundance has declined by 45% in areas open to aquarium fishing between 1999 and 2007. How effort allocation, harvesting efficiencies, and job satisfaction influence catch productivity and selectivity in West Hawaii’s aquarium fishery are investigated, and how these dynamics explain the discrepancy between catch rates and relative abundance for yellow tang is discussed. Cross-sectional fisher questionnaires, semi-structured fisher interviews, and in situ and ex situ catch analyses were performed. The results indicate that fishers dive deeper when reef fish recruitment is perceived as weak, increase harvest efficiency with larger fishing teams, and intensively harvest “coral-friendly” reef fish to supply the global aquarium fish trade. Experienced fishers were less likely to exit the fishery, and job satisfaction was high despite declining fish stocks. These findings may help explain harvesting efficiencies and fleet investment, underscore the importance for evaluating fisher behaviours, and have potential management implications for other aquarium fisheries.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The sudden occurrence of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi has been reported recently from different regions of the Baltic Sea and it has been suggested that the species has invaded the whole basin. Here we provide the first set of quantitative data of seasonal diet composition and life history traits of M. leidyi and its predatory role in the pelagic ecosystem of the Western Baltic Sea. The size structure of the species appeared to be dominated by small size classes and only a few adults were as large as those reported in the native region of the species and in other invaded areas. We show that the species has a high preference for small-sized and slow swimming prey, mainly during the winter low temperature period. Barnacle nauplii appeared to be the main source of carbon for the over-wintering population of M. leidyi. A preference for copepods was only found during August when these prey contributed up to 20% of the gut composition. In summer, planula larvae of the jellyfish Aurelia aurita were the most abundant prey in the gut content (feeding rate of 621 ind. ctenophore−1day−1). We further found that at highest densities of the species, in summer, a significant predation on its larvae occurs, this being the major carbon source of adults. Overall, these results are discussed in the context of trade-offs M. leidyi faces in the new environment and adverse environmental conditions, which are likely forcing the species toward reduced sizes and also probably reducing its potential predatory impact in the Baltic Sea.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Knowledge of the spatial and temporal distribution of juvenile cod is essential to closing the life cycle in population dynamic models, and it is a prerequisite for the design of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) aiming at the protection of juveniles. In this study, we use a hydrodynamic model to examine the spatial distribution of eastern Baltic cod larvae and early juveniles. The transport patterns of the larvae spawned at the three major spawning grounds in the central Baltic Sea were investigated by drift model simulations for the period 1979–2004. We analysed potential habitats for their suitability for juvenile settlement, i.e. the change from pelagic to demersal life. The results revealed a clear dependence of the probability for successful settling on wind-induced drift of larval cod, which is controlled by the local atmospheric conditions over the Baltic Sea. Furthermore, we found evidence that the final destinations of juvenile cod drift routes are affected by decadal climate variability. Application of the methodology to MPA design is discussed, e.g. identifying the overlap of areas with a high probability of successful juvenile cod settlement and regions of high fishing effort in small-meshed fisheries targeting sprat and herring.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: Vesteris Seamount is a solitary alkaline volcano in the Greenland Basin some 280 km NW of Jan Mayen. Topographic and geophysical studies have shown no sign of an associated plume trace. Evidence from ash layers in sediment cores around the volcano and dating of dredged samples show that it has been active in Quaternary times. The lavas from Vesteris studied here consist of basanites, tephrites, mugearite, and alkali basalts. Crystal fractionation models are consistent with the generation of the tephrites and mugearite from a basanitic parent. Extensive kaersutite fractionation is required late in the fractionation sequence to produce the extreme mugearite composition. Na-Al-Fe-rich green cores to many clinopyroxene phenocrysts at Vesteris suggest a fractionation history beginning at high pressure in the mantle. Differences between Vesteris and Jan Mayen in the ratios of highly incompatible trace elements such as Ce/Pb and Rb/Cs, which will not normally be fractionated from one another during mantle melting, suggest that the two are not derived from the same source. Relatively unradiogenic Sr isotope ratios (compared with Bulk Earth), and highly incompatible trace element patterns similar to those for St. Helena, suggest that Vesteris magmas are derived from a depleted, asthenospheric source. We propose that the Vesteris basanites are very low degree partial melts (˜1%) of this source, most probably those which give rise to the seismic low-velocity zone (LVZ). Such small-degree melts may preferentially tap small-scale heterogeneities in the asthenosphere. Vesteris lies at the intersection of two major structural trends in the Greenland Basin—(1) a zone of major reorientation of spreading direction on the Mohns Ridge north of Jan Mayen and (2) the extension of the Kolbeinsey Ridge axis. We propose that a combination of the extensional stress fields related to these two lineaments produces sufficient dilation of the lithosphere at Vesteris to allow magmas from the LVZ to reach the surface.
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  • 81
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 62 . pp. 1270-1280.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Oceanographic conditions in the brackish central Baltic Sea are strongly linked to atmospheric forcing and the unusual period of persistently strong westerlies that, since the late 1980s, have resulted in an increase in average water temperatures and decreasing salinity. These changes in temperature and salinity resulted in a change in the dominance of the mesozooplankton community from Pseudocalanus sp. to Temora longicornis and Acartia spp. Similar to the copepod community, the central Baltic fish community shifted from cod ( Gadus morhua ), dominant during the 1980s, to sprat ( Sprattus sprattus ), dominant during the 1990s. Further, the commercially important pelagic fish species herring ( Clupea harengus ) and sprat exhibited reductions in growth. Using Principal Component and Correlation Analyses we investigated the temporal variability in the importance of the food supply as well as competition on condition of central Baltic pelagic fish species. Our results indicate that herring condition results from a combined effect of changes in the food environment and increased competition with sprat, while sprat condition appeared to be primarily determined by intra-specific competition.
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  • 82
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 57 . pp. 1389-1394.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Qualitative historical benthos data (1902–1912) were compared with recent data (1986) to find long-term trends in epifauna species composition in the southern North Sea that may be attributed to fishery-induced changes. In general, the frequency of occurrence of bivalve species declined, whereas scavenger and predator species (crustaceans, gastropods, and sea stars) were observed more frequently in 1986. We suggest that these shifts can be attributed not only to the physical fishery impact, but also to the additional potential food for scavenging and predator species provided by the large amounts of discards and moribund benthos. Our findings are put into the perspective of the general development of the demersal fishery in the southern North Sea. Despite the problems with the historical data set, the comparison presented may be the best illustration achievable of the changes in the benthos from a near-pristine situation to the present conditions after long-term disturbance.
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  • 83
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, 11.02.2014. [Interview/Performance on television, radio, blog]
    Publication Date: 2015-02-09
    Type: Interview/Performance on television, radio, blog , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2017-09-25
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Olivine major and trace element compositions from 12 basalts from the southern Payenia volcanic province in Argentina have been analyzed by electron microprobe and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The olivines have high Fe/Mn and low Ca/Fe and many fall at the end of the global olivine array, indicating that they were formed from a pyroxene-rich source distinct from typical mantle peridotite. The olivines with the highest Fe/Mn have higher Zn/Fe, Zn and Co and lower Co/Fe than the olivines with lower Fe/Mn, also suggesting contributions from a pyroxene-rich source. Together with whole-rock radiogenic isotopes and elemental concentrations, the samples indicate mixing between two mantle sources: (1) a pyroxene-rich source with EM-1 ocean island basalt type trace element and isotope characteristics; (2) a peridotitic source with more radiogenic Pb that was metasomatized by subduction-zone fluids and/or melts. The increasing contributions from the pyroxene-rich source in the southern Payenia basalts are correlated with an increasing Fe-enrichment, which caused the olivines to have lower forsterite contents at a given Ni content. Al-in-olivine crystallization temperatures measured on olivine–spinel pairs are between 1155 and 1243°C and indicate that the magmas formed at normal upper mantle (asthenospheric) temperatures of ∼1350°C. The pyroxene-rich material is interpreted to have been brought up from the deeper parts of the upper mantle by vigorous asthenospheric upwelling caused by break-off of the Nazca slab south of Payenia during the Pliocene and roll-back of the subducting slab beneath Payenia. The pyroxene-rich mantle mixed with peridotitic metasomatized South Atlantic mantle in the mantle wedge beneath Payenia.
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  • 86
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 4 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: 16.05.2015 - 30.05.2015 Physical, chemical, biological research and fishery oceanography This multidisciplinary cruise extended a long-term data series on (eco-)system composition and functioning of the Baltic Sea, with a focus on the deeper basins. The series has been collected in similar form since 1986. A key characteristic of the cruise is the integration of oceanographic and biological information to enhance understanding of environmental and (fish) population fluctuations, and evolutionary processes in this system. The resulting datasets and samples are an essential component of the international EU project BONUS BIO-C3 coordinated by GEOMAR. The spatial focus lay on the Bornholm Basin (the most important spawning area of Baltic cod), but also included the Western Baltic Sea, Arkona and Gotland Basin, Gdansk Deep, and Stolpe Trench. Specific investigations included a detailed hydrographic survey (oxygen, salinity, temperature) of the Bornholm Basin, plankton surveys (zoo- and ichthyplankton, with the goal to determine the composition and the abundance and vertical and horizontal distribution of species, and to take samples for later measurements of nutritional condition), and pelagic fishery hauls for clupeid and gadoid fish. The latter served to determine stock structure, gonadal maturation, stomach contents, and egg production of sprat and cod, and to sample tissue for later genetic analyses and otoliths for age estimatation of individual cod. The abundance and distribution of fish species in the investigated area was also assessed with hydroacoustic methods. Additional cruise components were: (i) cod gonad and liver sampling for the determination of lipid content and histological studies; (ii) vertically resolved phytoplankton and zooplankton sampling for studies of plankton phenology.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: Analysis of the demographic structure of Calanus species in the North Atlantic presents particular difficulties due to the overlapping spatial distributions of four main congeneric species (Calanus finmarchicus, Calanus helgolandicus, Calanus glacialis and Calanus hyperboreus). These species have similar morphologies, making microscopic discrimination only possible between some of the species at late copepodite or adult stages. However, molecular techniques now offer the possibility of screening significant numbers of specimens and unambiguously identifying them to species, regardless of developmental stage. Unfortunately, the processing rate of specimens by molecular methods is still too low to offer a realistic alternative to microscopy for analysis of samples from large field surveys. Here, we outline and test an approach involving the use of molecular methodology in conjunction with conventional microscopy to assess the species assignment of developmental stage abundances of Calanus congeners. Our study has highlighted many important methodological issues. First, it cannot be assumed that the species composition is homogeneous across the development stages; applying proportional species composition of adults to morphologically undistinguishable earlier development stages can result in error. The second important conclusion is that prosome length may be a highly unreliable discriminator of C. finmarchicus and C. glacialis.
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  • 88
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    Unknown
    GEOMAR
    In:  (PhD/ Doctoral thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Kiel, Germany, 104 pp . GEOMAR-Report, 013 . DOI 10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_13_1992 〈http://dx.doi.org/10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_13_1992〉.
    Publication Date: 2020-10-20
    Description: Oxygen and carbon isotope measurements were carried out on tests of planktic foraminilers N. pachyderma (sin.) from eight sediment cores taken from the eastem Arctic Ocean, the Fram Strait, and the Iceland Sea, in order to reconstruct Arctic Ocean and Norwegian-Greenland Sea circulation patterns and ice covers during the last 130,000 years. ln addition, the influence of ice, temperature and salinity effects on the isotopic signal was quantified. Isotope measurements on foraminifers from sediment surface samples were used to elucidate the ecology of N. pachyderma (sin.). Changes in the oxygen and carbon isotope composition of N. pachyderma (sin.) from sediment surface samples document the horizontal and vertical changes of water mass boundaries controlled by watertemperature and salinity, because N. pachyderma (sin.) shows drastic changes in depth habitats, depending on the water mass properties. It was able to be shown that in the investigated areas a regional and spatial apparent increase of the ice effect occurred. This happened especially du ring the termination 1 by direct advection of meltwaters from nearby continents or during the termination and in interglacials by supply of isotopically light water from rivers. A northwardly proceeding overprint of the "global" ice effect, increasing from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea to the Arctic Ocean, was not able to be demonstrated. By means of a model the influence of temperature and salinity on the global ice volume signal during the last 130.000 years was recorded. In combination with the results of this study, the model was the basis for a reconstruction of the paleoceanographic development of the Arctic Ocean and the Norwegian-Greenland Sea during this time interval. The conception of a relatively thick and permanent sea ice cover in the Nordic Seas during glacial times should be replaced by the model of a seasonally and regionally highly variable ice cover. Only during isotope stage 5e may there have been a local deep water formation in the Fram Strait.
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 89
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    GEOMAR
    In:  (PhD/ Doctoral thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel, 173, A29 pp . GEOMAR-Report, 073 . DOI 10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_73_1998 〈http://dx.doi.org/10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_73_1998〉.
    Publication Date: 2015-12-11
    Description: Oxygen isotope stratigraphy was established, and various geochemical and mineralogical investigations were performed on Mid-Atlantic ridge crest sediments at 37-39°N in the vicinity of the Lucky Strike and Menez Gwen hydrothermal sites, in order to characterize sediment sources in time and space and to describe and quantify hydrothermal input in sediments. Multivariate statistical analysis of geochemical data demonstrated that volcaniclastic, ultramafic, detrital and hydrothermal sediment sources are present in addition to biogenic carbonate, which dominates the chemical composition of most samples. The hydrothermal contribution includes metals derived from hydrothermal solutions (Fe, Mn, Cu) and elements scavenged from the water column by hydrothermal oxyhydroxides (P, V, As). The distribution of hydrothermal factor scores and the pattern of metal accumulation rates suggest maximum hydrothermal input at 3rN south of the Lucky Strike vent field, which may include contributions from other presently undiscovered vent fields south of the area of the present study. Metal accumulation rates are significantly higher than at abyssal plains remote from the ridge axis, and comparable to other hydrothermally influenced environments. While the downcore distribution of hydrothermal tracers was obviously modified by early diagenetic processes, time-integrated average fluxes clearly indicate continuous hydrothermal influence in the study area at least down to 55,000 years B.P .. Barium appears to be dominantly of hydrothermal origin in sediments on the flanks of the Lucky Strike seamount, where it may be derived from redeposited hydrothermal precipitates containing abundant barite. A minor contribution of plume-derived fine-grained sulfides and possibly barite may be present in distal sediments based on the occurrence of a cubic phase, probably sphalerite, in gravity concentrates (〉3.0g/cm1 ). However, biogenic sources seem to predominate in these sediments. Ba maxima, particularly during early Tennination I, were tentatively interpreted as indicators of productivity spikes which could result from a combination of incursions of cold surface water and enhanced terrigenous input. An allochthonous chrysotile-dominated serpentine layer is intercalated within pclagic sediments in a basin in the central part of the 38°05'N fracture zone. This material was derived from alteration of ultramafic rocks and may represent a low-temperature hydrothermal deposit associated with this rock type. It was apparently transported down the walls of the fracture zone in this area of steep relief. Cr/Ni-ratios suggest an olivine-enriched protolith, which is in accord with the results of previous petrologic studies of pcridotites at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and related to the proximity of the Azores hot spot. The predominance of chrysotilc suggests that serpentinization took place at temperatures 〈200°C. Smectite/chlorite mixed layer phases and chlorite formed at the same or slightly higher temperatures. The accessory phases talc and tremolite indicate greenschist facies conditions, which may have occurred prior to serpentinization during a history of retrograde metamorphosis. Alternatively, talc and tremolite were derived from another source area on the walls of the fracture zone.
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 90
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 58 (10). pp. 1029-1040.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-21
    Description: The ECM of astrocytic tumors promotes and modulates a variety of cell functions, such as cell attachment, migration, proliferation, survival, and signaling. Recent studies indicate that there are extensive and complex interactions among ECM molecules and that these can modify the function of the participating molecules, interactions between the proteoglycan, phosphacan, and the ECM protein, tenascin, being an example (63). In addition, on nonastrocytic cell types it has been shown that an integrin receptor and the cell surface proteoglycan CD44 recognize the same ECM ligand osteopontin, and thus modulate each others function (77, 86). Thus, interacting components in the ECM and cell surface receptors likely cooperate in regulating cell function and tumor invasion (59, 77, 80, 85-87, 95). As tumor cells are capable of remodeling their ECM through synthesis of ECM proteins and proteoglycans, as well as upregulating integrin receptors and proteoglycans on their cell surface, tumor cells are capable of controlling their own destiny. ECM molecules which are concentrated in blood vessels of malignant astrocytomas, such as tenascin-C and the 250-kDa CSPG (NG2), are potentially therapeutic targets.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2019-02-01
    Description: Annual growth zones in cod otoliths from the eastern Baltic stock are less discrete than in other cod stocks leading to biased age reading, which recently led to a failure of age-based assessment in the eastern Baltic cod stock. In this study, we explored the applicability of minor and trace element patterns in cod otoliths for age determination. By first identifying elements of interest in a stock without ageing problems, western Baltic cod, we then tested their applicability on another stock without ageing problems, North Sea cod, and finally applied this knowledge to estimate age of eastern Baltic cod. In western Baltic cod, matching patterns with respect to occurrence of minima and maxima in both otolith opacity and element concentrations were found for Cu, Zn, and Rb, and inverse patterns with Mg and Mn. No match was found for Pb, Ba, and Sr. In the test stock, the North Sea cod, the same patterns in Cu, Zn, Rb, Mg, and Mn signals occurred. All eastern Baltic cod with low visual contrast between growth zones exhibited clearly defined synchronous cycles in Cu, Zn, Rb and Pb. Using a combined finite differencing method and structural break models approach, the statistical significance of the local profile minima were identified, based on which their age could be estimated. Despite extensive environmental differences between the three areas examined, the element concentrations of Cu, Zn, and Rb were strongly correlated in all individuals with similar correlations in all three areas, suggesting that the incorporation mechanisms are the same for these elements and independent of environmental concentrations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 92
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 37 (1). pp. 11-15.
    Publication Date: 2017-04-13
    Description: The comb jelly Mnemiopsis leidyi is considered to be a successful invasive species, partly due to its high reproduction potential. However, due to the absence of direct carbon measurements of eggs, specific reproduction rates remain uncertain. We show that egg carbon is 0.22 ± 0.02 µg C and up to 21 times higher than previously extrapolated. With maximum rates of 11 232 eggs ind−1 day−1, largest animals in northern Europe invest ∼10% day−1 of their body carbon into reproduction. The comb jelly M. leidyi has received wide public and scientific attention during the last decades due to its commonly observed formation of bloom abundances in native and invaded areas (e.g. Costello et al., 2012; Riisgård et al., 2012). One of the traits suggested to be responsible for M. leidyi's invasion success is its high fecundity. At the northern end of its distribution range in native areas, M. leidyi has been shown to produce up to 9380 and 14 233 eggs ind−1 day−1 (Kremer, 1976a; Graham et al., 2009), with similar rates of 9910 eggs ind−1 day−1 for the native southern population in Biscayne Bay, FL, USA (Baker and Reeve, 1974). Within invaded European waters, rates of up to 3000 and 12 000 eggs ind−1 day−1 have been recorded for northern and southern populations, respectively (Zaika and Revkov, 1994; Javidpour et al., 2009). Since M. leidyi is a simultaneous hermaphrodite and fertilized eggs are produced on a daily basis during favorable conditions (Jaspers, 2012), M. leidyi can circumvent the Allee effect and efficiently seed new populations even from few founding individuals. Although …
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 93
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 1 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: 01.10.-10.10.2012
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2015-02-23
    Description: Thema des Gemeinschaftsprojektes: Dreidimensionale Detailabbildungen prominenter reflexionsseismischer Strukturen am aktiven Kontinentalrand vor Costa Rica Förderungszeitraum insgesamt vom 01.07.1996 bis 31.12.1998
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2018-07-10
    Description: New marine geophysical data recorded across the Tonga-Kermadec subduction zone are used to image deformation and seismic velocity structures of the forearc and Pacific Plate where the Louisville Ridge seamount chain subducts. Due to the obliquity of the Louisville Ridge to the trench and the fast 128 mm yr−1 south–southwest migration of the ridge-trench collision zone, post-, current and pre-seamount subduction deformation can be investigated between 23°S and 28°S. We combine our interpretations from the collision zone with previous results from the post- and pre-collision zones to define the along-arc variation in deformation due to seamount subduction. In the pre-collision zone the lower-trench slope is steep, the mid-trench slope has ∼3-km-thick stratified sediments and gravitational collapse of the trench slope is associated with basal erosion by subducting horst and graben structures on the Pacific Plate. This collapse indicates that tectonic erosion is a normal process affecting this generally sediment starved subduction system. In the collision zone the trench-slope decreases compared to the north and south, and rotation of the forearc is manifest as a steep plate boundary fault and arcward dipping sediment in a 12-km-wide, ∼2-km-deep mid-slope basin. A ∼3 km step increase in depth of the middle and lower crustal isovelocity contours below the basin indicates the extent of crustal deformation on the trench slope. At the leading edge of the overriding plate, upper crustal P-wave velocities are ∼4.0 km s−1 and indicate the trench fill material is of seamount origin. Osbourn Seamount on the outer rise has extensional faulting on its western slope and mass wasting of the seamount provides the low Vp material to the trench. In the post-collision zone to the north, the trench slope is smooth, the trench is deep, and the crystalline crust thins at the leading edge of the overriding plate where Vp is low, ∼5.5 km s−1. These characteristics are attributed to a greater degree of extensional collapse of the forearc in the wake of seamount subduction. The northern end of a seismic gap lies at the transition from the smooth lower-trench slope of the post-collision zone, to the block faulted and elevated lower-trench slope in the collision zone, suggesting a causative link between the collapse of the forearc and seismogenesis. Along the forearc, the transient effects of a north-to-south progression of ridge subduction are preserved in the geomorphology, whereas longer-term effects may be recorded in the ∼80 km offset in trench strike at the collision zone itself.
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  • 96
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Geophysical Journal International, 202 (1). pp. 454-463.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The Murray Ridge/Dalrymple Trough system forms the boundary between the Indian and Arabian plates in the northern Arabian Sea. Geodetic constraints from the surrounding con- tinents suggest that this plate boundary is undergoing oblique extension at a rate of a few millimetres per year. We present wide-angle seismic data that constrains the composition of the Ridge and of adjacent lithosphere beneath the Indus Fan. We infer that Murray Ridge, like the adjacent Dalrymple Trough, is underlain by continental crust, while a thin crustal section beneath the Indus Fan represents thinned continental crust or exhumed serpentinized mantle that forms part of a magma-poor rifted margin. Changes in crustal structure across the Murray Ridge and Dalrymple Trough can explain short-wavelength gravity anomalies, but a long-wavelength anomaly must be attributed to deeper density contrasts that may result from a large age contrast across the plate boundary. The origin of this fragment of continental crust remains enigmatic, but the presence of basement fabrics to the south that are roughly parallel to Murray Ridge suggests that it separated from the India/Seychelles/Madagascar block by extension during early breakup of Gondwana.
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  • 97
  • 98
    Publication Date: 2015-11-10
    Description: We deployed KOSMOS units in different climate zones and marine ecosystem types between 2011 and 2015, in order to study the influence of ocean acidification on the succession of plankton communities under in-situ conditions. Settling particulate matter within the mesocosms was quantitatively collected in sediment traps attached to the bottom of the mesocosms. We applied a low vacuum sampling strategy to empty these particle traps through silicon tubes reaching down from the sea surface outside of the mesocosm enclosures. The video shows the setup of the traps and the sample recovery from small boats attached to the KOSMOS units. The video can be downloaded from the OceanRep server (GEOMAR) but is also available on the KOSMOS channel of the streaming platform YouTube.
    Type: Video , NonPeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/other
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  • 99
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    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 37 (2). pp. 293-305.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: Aquatic ecosystems experience large natural variation in elemental composition of carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), which is further enhanced by human activities. Primary producers typically reflect the nutrient ratios of their resource, whose stoichiometric composition can vary widely in conformity to environmental conditions. In contrast, C to nutrient ratios in consumers are largely constrained within a narrow range, termed homeostasis. In comparison to crustacean zooplankton, less is known about the ability of protozoan grazers and rotifer species to maintain stoichiometric balance. In this study, we used laboratory experiments with a primary producer (Nannochloropsis sp.), three different species of protozoan grazers and one mesozooplankton species: two heterotrophic dinoflagellates (Gyrodinium dominans and Oxyrrhis marina), a ciliate (Euplotes sp.) and a rotifer (Brachionus plicatilis) to test the stoichiometric response to five nutrient treatments. We showed that the dependency of zooplankton C:N:P ratios on C: nutrient ratios of their food source varies among species. Similar to the photoautotroph, the two heterotrophic dinoflagellates weakly regulated their internal stoichiometry. In contrast, the strength of stoichiometric regulation increased to strict homeostasis in both the ciliate and the rotifer, similar to crustacean zooplankton. Our study further shows that ciliate and rotifer growth can be constrained by imbalanced resource supply. It also indicates that these key primary consumers have the potential to trophically upgrade poor stoichiometric autotrophic food quality for higher trophic levels.
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  • 100
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany, 1 pp.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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