ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Language
Number of Hits per Page
Default Sort Criterion
Default Sort Ordering
Size of Search History
Default Email Address
Default Export Format
Default Export Encoding
Facet list arrangement
Maximum number of values per filter
Auto Completion
Topics (search only within journals and journal articles that belong to one or more of the selected topics)
Feed Format
Maximum Number of Items per Feed
feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
Collection
Language
Years
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: Peatlands store and emit large amounts of greenhouse gases. With the climate changing due to global warming, measuring these emissions helps to get a better understanding of the role of peatlands in the global carbon cycle. Measurements at a bog site of the Siikaneva peatland show that the emissions vary along the different microtopographies shaped by their vegetation and ground water level. To upscale these measurements, a supervised classification of the study area was implemented in this study by testing a method that uses high-resolution multispectral aerial imagery, captured by a UAV (Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle), and a Random Forest classifier. A cohesive orthomosaic of the study area was produced, training data were generated to adjust the Random Forest model, and the study area was classified. The results show that the applied methods were successful in generating a multispectral orthomosaic as well as a classified raster of the study area. A mean classification accuracy of 75.7 % was achieved, which can be considered as a good result. Misclassification rates of neighboring microtopographies with similar vegetation could be mitigated by utilizing a LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) sensor in further studies.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Thesis , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Comisión Colombiana del Océano | Bogotá D.C., Colombia
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: Hace tres años atrás el Comité Técnico Nacional de Coordinación de Datos e Información Oceánicos (CTN Diocean) de la Comisión Colombiana del Océano (CCO), estableció un plan de trabajo que abarca cinco años de actividades institucionales para fortalecer la gestión de estos importantes activos del país. Para entonces se tuvieron en cuenta diferentes estrategias como línea base para definir las tareas a desarrollar, y en la actualidad es gratificante para miembros e invitados permanentes confirmar, que lo planeado sigue vigente y acorde con los desafíos del ‘Decenio de las Ciencias Oceánicas para el Desarrollo Sostenible’, las necesidades de la comunidad y los recientes lineamientos de política nacionales e internacionales. En el presente número del Boletín CTN Diocean, se destacan entre otros, dos reconocimientos logrados en el nivel internacional por parte de instituciones que hacen parte del comité y que le aportan al fortalecimiento de la gestión de datos oceánicos de Colombia: el primero, los datos abiertos oceanográficos como una actividad del ‘Decenio de las Ciencias Oceánicas para el Desarrollo Sostenible’ de la Comisión Oceanográfica Intergubernamental (COI); y el segundo, la copresidencia para el periodo entre sesiones 2023-2025 del programa para el Intercambio Internacional de Datos Oceanográficos (COI-IODE) junto con Suecia, en el marco de la cual se inició la asesoría con nuestros hermanos panameños en la materia.
    Description: Published
    Description: Not Known
    Keywords: Acceso abierto ; Usuario de información ; Gestión de la información ; Base de datos ; Sistema de información ; Organización y gestión ; ASFA_2015::G::Geographic information systems ; ASFA_2015::I::Information centres ; ASFA_2015::D::Databases ; ASFA_2015::I::Information handling
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings
    Format: 29
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Universidade Estadual de Maringá. Departamento de Biologia. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia de Ambientes Aquáticos Continentais
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: The freshwater ichthyofauna is largely threatened by the anthropogenic impacts in these ecosystems. The climatic changes caused by human actions and dams’ constructions concerningly affects the freshwater fishes, including its biotic interactions network. Thus, this work aimed at evaluating the Upper Paraná River floodplain’s (UPRF) ichthyofauna under the impacts caused by climate changes, years of extreme drought an extreme flood, and under the impacts caused by the construction of an upstream dam, the Sérgio Motta Hydroelectric Power Plant, Brazil. The sampled years were classified in extreme drought, neutral and extreme flood, according to the predominant characteristics of its hydrological regime, and in pré-damming years, before the upstream hydroelectric power plant construction and reservoir’s flooding, and post-damming years. The abiotic and hydrometric variables were concurrently sampled with the abundance of fish species, allowing to exclude the environmental variables’ effects over the species’ cooccurrence, using multivariate generalized linear models with latent variables. The force of the interspecific biotic interactions was obtained through cooccurrence values for each pair of species, visualized through negative, neutral, and positive values. Regarding the results involving the hydrological regime influence, it was observed differences between drought, neutral and flood years, with stronger cooccurrence values between the UPRF’s ichthyofauna in drought years (for positive and negative values). Regarding the results involving the construction of the UPRF’s upstream dam, it was observed differences comparing the pré-damming and post-damming years cooccurrence patters, with predominantly positive values in post-damming years, and predominantly neutral cooccurrences in pré-damming years. These work results indicate the increment of the cooccurrence values between a floodplain’s fish species due to extreme droughts and upstream dams’ constructions, once the cooccurrence values were more intense under these conditions. Stands out the importance of biotic interactions for the elaboration of management plans and freshwater species conservation in response to anthropogenic actions.
    Description: A ictiofauna de ambientes de água doce se encontra amplamente ameaçada por ações antrópicas. As mudanças climáticas e a construção de barragens afetam os peixes de água doce e suas redes de interações bióticas. Neste contexto, este estudo avaliou a ictiofauna da planície de inundação do alto rio Paraná (PIARP) sob os impactos de mudanças climáticas, épocas de secas e cheias extremas, e sob os impactos causados pela construção de uma barragem a montante, a Usina Hidrelétrica Sérgio Motta, Brasil. Os anos amostrados foram classificados em anos de seca extrema, neutros e de cheia extrema, de acordo com as condições predominantes de seu regime hidrológico, e em anos de pré-barramento, antes da construção e inundação do reservatório da usina hidrelétrica a montante, e pós-barramento. As variáveis abióticas e variáveis hidrométricas foram amostradas concomitantemente com a abundância das espécies de peixe, permitindo excluir o efeito das variáveis ambientais sobre a ocorrência das espécies, com o uso de modelos lineares generalizados multivariados de variáveis latentes. Obteve-se a força das interações bióticas interespecíficas pelos valores de coocorrência, positivos ou negativos, entre cada par de espécies. Com relação aos resultados envolvendo a influência dos regimes hidrológicos, foram encontradas diferenças nos valores médios de coocorrência entre anos de seca extrema, anos neutros e anos de cheia extrema, indicando que os valores de coocorrência são mais fortes entre a ictiofauna da PIARP (tanto interações positivas quanto negativas) em anos de seca. Para os efeitos da construção da barragem a montante da PIARP, observou-se diferenças entre os padrões de coocorrência de espécies antes e após a sua construção, indicando valores de coocorrência predominantemente positivos no período pós-barramento, e coocorrências predominantemente neutras no período pré-barramento. Os resultados indicam incremento nos padrões de coocorrência entre as espécies de peixes da planície de inundação frente secas extremas e construção de barragens a montante, uma vez que os valores de coocorrência foram mais intensos sob essas condições. Destaca-se a importância das interações bióticas em resposta às ações antrópicas para a elaboração de planos de manejo e para a conservação das espécies de peixes de água doce.
    Description: PhD
    Keywords: Peixes de água doce ; Comunidades, Ecologia de ; Interações bióticas ; Ações antrópicas ; Coocorrência de espécies ; Variáveis ambientais ; Variáveis hidrométricas ; Generalized linear latent variable models (GLLVM) ; ASFA_2015::F::Freshwater ecology ; ASFA_2015::F::Freshwater fish ; ASFA_2015::C::Communities (ecological) ; ASFA_2015::I::Interactions ; ASFA_2015::A::Anthropogenic factors ; ASFA_2015::S::Species diversity ; ASFA_2015::E::Environmental factors ; ASFA_2015::H::Hydrometers
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Thesis/Dissertation
    Format: 71pp.
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Naturalis Biodiversity Center
    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 45, pp. 196-220
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: Trunk disease fungal pathogens reduce olive production globally by causing cankers, dieback, and other decline-related symptoms on olive trees. Very few fungi have been reported in association with olive dieback and decline in South Africa. Many of the fungal species reported from symptomatic olive trees in other countries have broad host ranges and are known to occur on other woody host plants in the Western Cape province, the main olive production region of South Africa. This survey investigated the diversity of fungi and symptoms associated with olive dieback and decline in South Africa. Isolations were made from internal wood symptoms of 145 European and 42 wild olive trees sampled in 10 and 9 districts, respectively. A total of 99 taxa were identified among 440 fungal isolates using combinations of morphological and molecular techniques. A new species of Pseudophaeomoniella, P. globosa, had the highest incidence, being recovered from 42.8 % of European and 54.8 % of wild olive samples. This species was recovered from 9 of the 10 districts where European olive trees were sampled and from all districts where wild olive trees were sampled. Members of the Phaeomoniellales (mainly P. globosa) were the most prevalent fungi in five of the seven symptom types considered, the only exceptions being twig dieback, where members of the Botryosphaeriaceae were more common, and soft/white rot where only Basidiomycota were recovered. Several of the species identified are known as pathogens of olives or other woody crops either in South Africa or elsewhere in the world, including species of Neofusicoccum, Phaeoacremonium, and Pleurostoma richardsiae. However, 81 of the 99 taxa identified have not previously been recorded on olive trees and have unknown interactions with this host. These taxa include one new genus and several putative new species, of which four are formally described as Celerioriella umnquma sp. nov., Pseudophaeomoniella globosa sp. nov., Vredendaliella oleae gen. & sp. nov., and Xenocylindrosporium margaritarum sp. nov.
    Keywords: Ecology ; Evolution ; Behavior and Systematics ; Celerioriella ; five new taxa ; Olea europaea subsp. cuspidata ; Olea europaea subsp. europaea ; phylogenetics ; Pseudophaeomoniella ; taxonomy ; Vredendaliella ; Xenocylindrosporium
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vogelsang, Elke; Sarnthein, Michael; Pflaumann, Uwe (2001): d18O Stratigraphy, chronology, and sea surface temperatures of Atlantic sediment records (GLAMAP-2000 Kiel). Berichte-Reports, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Kiel, 13, 13+244 pp., https://doi.org/10.2312/reports-ifg.2001.13
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: A uniform chronology for foraminifera-based sea surface temperature records has been established in more than 120 sediment cores obtained from the equatorial and eastern Atlantic up to the Arctic Ocean. The chronostratigraphy of the last 30,000 years is mainly based on published d18O records and 14C ages from accelerator mass spectrometry, converted into calendar-year ages. The high-precision age control provides the database necessary for the uniform reconstruction of the climate interval of the Last Glacial Maximum within the GLAMAP-2000 project.
    Keywords: 200228; 41; A150/180; A180-73; Antarctic Ocean; ANT-IV/1c; Arctic Ocean; ARK-II/4; ARK-IV/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-X/2; ARK-XIII/2; ARK-XIII/3; Atlantic Ocean; Barents Sea; BCR; Bear Island Fan; Biscaya; BOFS11882#4; BOFS11886#2; BOFS11896#1; BOFS11902#1; BOFS11905#1; BOFS14K; BOFS16K; BOFS17K; BOFS31/1K; BOFS31#1; BOFS5K; BOFS8K; Box corer (Reineck); CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; CD53; CD84; CD84_2K; CEPAG; CH8X; Charles Darwin; CHN82-24; D184; Denmark Strait; Discovery (1962); East Atlantic; eastern Romanche Fracture Zone; Equatorial Atlantic; FGGE-Equator 79 - First GARP Global Experiment; Fram Strait; GC; GEOFAR; GEOTROPEX 83, NOAMP I; Giant box corer; GIK1171-1; GIK12309-2; GIK12310-3; GIK12310-4; GIK12328-4; GIK12328-5; GIK12329-4; GIK12329-6; GIK12337-4; GIK12337-5; GIK12345-4; GIK12345-5; GIK12347-1; GIK12347-2; GIK12379-1; GIK12379-3; GIK12392-1; GIK13289-1; GIK13289-2; GIK13289-3; GIK13291-1; GIK13519-1; GIK13521-1; GIK15612-2; GIK15627-3; GIK15637-1; GIK15669-1; GIK16017-2; GIK16396-1; GIK16397-2; GIK16415-1; GIK16415-2; GIK16457-1; GIK16457-2; GIK16458-1; GIK16458-2; GIK16772-1; GIK16772-2; GIK16776-1; GIK16776-2; GIK16867-2; GIK17045-2; GIK17045-3; GIK17049-6; GIK17050-1; GIK17050-2; GIK17051-3; GIK17724-2; GIK17725-1; GIK17725-2; GIK17730-4; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21730-2 PS13/224; GIK23056-2; GIK23065-2; GIK23071-2; GIK23071-3; GIK23071-5; GIK23074-1; GIK23074-3; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GIK23262-3; GIK23294-4; GIK23351-1; GIK23354-6; GIK23415-9; GIK23419-8; GIK23519-5; GKG; Glacial Atlantic Ocean Mapping; GLAMAP2000; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Slope; HU87-033-008; HU90-13-013; HU91-045-090; HUD90/13; Hudson; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Jean Charcot; KAL; KAL15; KAL20; Kasten corer; Kasten corer 15 cm; Kasten corer 20 cm; KF09; KF13; KF16; KN708-1; KOL; Le Noroit; Le Suroît; M11/1; M12392-1; M13/2; M17/2; M2/2; M25; M35/1; M35003-4; M35027-1; M39; M51; M53; M53_169; M57; M6/5; M60; M65; M7/2; M7/3; M7/5; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952012; MD95-2012; MD952039; MD95-2039; MD952040; MD95-2040; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; NA87-22; NEAP; NEAP-03K; NEAP-08K; NEAP-15K; NEAP-17K; NE Atlantic; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Northwest Atlantic; Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; OD-041-04; Oden; ODEN-96; off Gabun; off Iceland; off Liberia; off West Africa; PALEOCINAT; PALEOCINAT II; PC; Piston corer; Piston corer (Kiel type); PO158/B; PO175B; Polarstern; Porto Seamount; POS158/2; POS175/2; POS175/2_1171; POS210/2; Poseidon; PS05; PS08; PS11; PS1230-1; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS1533-3; PS17; PS17/242; PS17/245; PS17/251; PS17/290; PS1730-2; PS19/100; PS19/112; PS1919-2; PS1922-1; PS1927-2; PS1951-1; PS19 EPOS II; PS2129-1; PS2138-1; PS2446-4; PS2613-6; PS2644-5; PS27; PS27/020; PS2837-5; PS2837-6; PS2876-1; PS2876-2; PS2887-1; PS2887-2; PS31; PS31/113; PS31/160-5; PS44; PS44/065; PS45; PS45/029; PS45/058; RC11; RC1112; RC11-86; RC12; RC12-267; RC12-294; RC13; RC13-153; RC13-228; RC13-229; RC24; RC24-16; REYKJANES-RÜCKEN; Robert Conrad; SL; SO82; SO82_5-2; Sonne; SPC; Sphincter corer; SU81-18; SU90-03; SU90-39; SU90-I06; SU92; SU92-21; SUBTROPEX 82; Svalbard; V16; V16-20; V16-205; V17; V17-165; V18; V18-357; V22; V22-174; V22-197; V23; V23-100; V23-81; V25; V25-56; V25-59; V26; V26-124; V27; V27-60; V27-86; V28; V28-127; V28-14; V28-56; V29; V29-179; V30; V30-40; V30-49; VA-10/3; Valdivia (1961); Vema; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 272 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: The Tara Oceans Expedition (2009-2013) sampled the world oceans on board a 36 m long schooner, collecting environmental data and organisms from viruses to planktonic metazoans for later analyses using modern sequencing and state-of-the-art imaging technologies. Tara Oceans Data are particularly suited to study the genetic, morphological and functional diversity of plankton. Data sets in this collection provide methodological and environmental context to all samples collected during the Tara Oceans Expedition (2009-2013).
    Keywords: Fondation Tara Expeditions; FondTara; OCEANOMICS; Tara_Oceans_2009-2013; Tara Oceans Expedition; wOrld oCEAN biOressources, biotechnologies and Earth-systeM servICeS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Riebesell, Ulf; Bach, Lennart Thomas; Bellerby, Richard G J; Bermúdez Monsalve, Rafael; Boxhammer, Tim; Czerny, Jan; Larsen, Aud; Ludwig, Andrea; Schulz, Kai Georg (2017): Competitive fitness of a predominant pelagic calcifier impaired by ocean acidification. Nature Geoscience, 10(1), 19-23, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2854
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: Coccolithophores -single-celled calcifying phytoplankton- are an important group of marine primary producers and the dominant builders of calcium carbonate globally. Coccolithophores form extensive blooms and increase the density and sinking speed of organic matter via calcium carbonate ballasting. Thereby, they play a key role in the marine carbon cycle. Coccolithophore physiological responses to experimental ocean acidification have ranged from moderate stimulation to substantial decline in growth and calcification rates, combined with enhanced malformation of their calcite platelets. Here we report on a mesocosm experiment conducted in a Norwegian fjord in which we exposed a natural plankton community to a wide range of CO2-induced ocean acidification, to test whether these physiological responses affect the ecological success of coccolithophore populations. Under high-CO2 treatments, Emiliania huxleyi, the most abundant and productive coccolithophore species, declined in population size during the pre-bloom period and lost the ability to form blooms. As a result, particle sinking velocities declined by up to 30% and sedimented organic matter was reduced by up to 25% relative to controls. There were also strong reductions in seawater concentrations of the climate-active compound dimethylsulfide in CO2-enriched mesocosms. We conclude that ocean acidification can lower calcifying phytoplankton productivity, potentially creating a positive feedback to the climate system.
    Keywords: BIOACID; Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: A biomarker approach is applied on a well-dated core from the Beaufort Sea directly off the Mackenzie River to reconstruct changes in sea ice, sea surface temperature (SST), primary productivity, and terrigenous input. High-resolution records indicate that the southern Beaufort Sea was nearly ice-free in summer during the last deglaciation and early Holocene, and a seasonal sea-ice cover developed during the mid-late Holocene, coinciding with a drop in terrigenous sediment flux and primary production. Superimposed to this climate-driven long-term change in surface-water characteristics, we document two major flood events during the deglacial to Holocene transition. Such major flood events in the Beaufort Sea region may have profound effect on global climate change, especially during times when the massive Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) collapsed, and huge amount of freshwater was drained into the Beaufort Sea. This freshening of the Arctic Ocean may have resulted in increased freshwater export into the North Atlantic, causing reduced North Atlantic deep-water formation. The first flood event occurring at ca. 13 kyr BP is related to the Younger Dryas (YD) flood which may have caused severe cooling. The second flood event occurred at ca. 11 kyr BP, whose existence has been hypothesized for a long time but restricted by quality records. Through studies of our sediment core and other records nearby, we hypothesize that the second flood event is more related to shelf flooding induced by strong coastal erosion. 

    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; Beaufort Sea; GDGT; IP25; Sea ice; sterols
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: The data-sets comes from three locations representative of three different marine ecosystems: Fjord (Chilean Patagonia), Ny-Ålesund (Arctic) and Mediterranean (Crete). It contains chemical and biological data collected in three mesocosm and four microcosm experiments conducted in the spring - summer period, in which the physico-chemical (pH, Carbon) and biological (grazing) conditions were altered to represent potential future climate change scenarios. The data-sets contains measurements in: carbonate chemistry, macro- and micro-nutrients concentrations, primary production, phytoplankton taxonomy, virus abundance, bacterial production, bacterial abundance, Zoo- and microzoo-plankton abundance, grazing rates for different taxonomic groups.
    Keywords: Arctic; Climate change; climatic; fjords; Marine ecosystems; Mediterranean; Microbial Food Web; multi-stressors; non-climatic; OCEAN-CERTAIN; Ocean Food-web Patrol – Climate Effects: Reducing Targeted Uncertainties with an Interactive Network
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-04-27
    Description: Here we represent pore water, headspace gas, and TOC data from the four cores recovered from the Chukchi Sea by Jumbo Piston Corer (JPC) during the ARA06C Expedition in 2015 to investigate the origin and diagenesis of pore water and gas. The study cores were retrieved from the Chukchi Sea Shelf (ARA06C-JPC01), the Northwind Basin (ARA06C-JPC02), the East Siberia Continental Slope (ARA06C-JPC03), and the Chukchi Basin (ARA06C-JPC04). We collected pore water from Site ARA06C-JPC01, ARA06C-JPC02, ARA06C-JPC03, and ARA06C-JPC04 and performed compositional and isotopic analyses (e.g. major cation and anions, oxygen, and deuterium isotope, carbon-13 isotope of dissolved carbon, 87Sr/86Sr). The analyzed results of pore water were displayed in the PW Table. The compositional and isotopic data of headspace gas (e.g. methane concentration, and carbon-13 isotope of methane and carbon dioxide) from Site ARA06C-JPC01, ARA06C-JPC02, ARA06C-JPC03, and ARA06C-JPC04 as well as TOC content of bulk sediment from Site ARA06C-JPC01, were represented in the HS Table and TOC Table, respectively.
    Keywords: ARA06C Expedtion; Chukchi Sea; Headspace Gas; pore water; TOC
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...