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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: We present a magnesium (Mg) and strontium (Sr) record from an aragonitic speleothem (Grotte de Piste, Morocco, 34‬°N; 04°W) providing a reconstruction of effective rainfall from 619 to 1962 AD. The corresponding drip site was monitored over 2 yr for drip water Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca ratios. Results show evidence for prior aragonite precipitation, which can explain negative correlations between speleothem Mg and Sr concentrations. The data shown here have important climate implications concerning the evolution of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). A comparison of the stalagmite data from Grotte de Piste with an updated tree ring based drought reconstruction from Morocco and other NAO related proxy records confirms that the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was dominated by NAO+ conditions. The stalagmite record and multiple proxy records from the Iberian Peninsula, however, suggest that considerable rainfall variability occurred during the MWP. This implies that the NAO has been more variable during the MWP than formerly suggested.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-12-12
    Description: Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) now form an important part of marine conservation and fisheries management; hence, there is broad interest in developing procedures that optimize their design. We used data collected over a 10-year period (2003–2012) from direct surveys and 〉100 adult male and female loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta ) tracked with devices, includ ing GPS loggers and Fastloc GPSArgos, to consider the optimum design for a MPA at a globally important breeding area, where there is already an existing national marine park aiming to protect the population (Zakynthos, Greece). Turtles primarily used areas very close to shore (approx. 7 km in length by 1 km in width, within the 〈10 m isobath) for breeding and foraging activity at different times of the year. We calculated that this small nearshore coastal zone encompassed 72% of all turtle GPS locations recorded in the MPA, and is therefore important for conservation management. We developed an index to evaluate the suitabili ty of the existing and proposed conserv ation zones based on (1) home range area use by turtles in these zones versus (2) zone size, so that the benefit to turtles could be maximized while minimizing the negative impacts to other stakeholders (e.g., boat operators). With this evidence-based approach, we propose a modification to the existing MPA that might both enhance local economic tourism activities and better safeguard this key sea turtle breeding population. The approaches used here will have general application for the design of MPAs used by mobile species that can be tracked.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-10-21
    Description: In order to use environmental models effectively for management and decision-making, it is vital to establish an appropriate level of confidence in their performance. This paper reviews techniques available across various fields for characterising the performance of environmental models with focus on numerical, graphical and qualitative methods. General classes of direct value comparison, coupling real and modelled values, preserving data patterns, indirect metrics based on parameter values, and data transformations are discussed. In practice environmental modelling requires the use and implementation of workflows that combine several methods, tailored to the model purpose and dependent upon the data and information available. A five-step procedure for performance evaluation of models is suggested, with the key elements including: (i) (re)assessment of the model's aim, scale and scope; (ii) characterisation of the data for calibration and testing; (iii) visual and other analysis to detect under- or non-modelled behaviour and to gain an overview of overall performance; (iv) selection of basic performance criteria; and (v) consideration of more advanced methods to handle problems such as systematic divergence between modelled and observed values. Highlights ► Numerical, graphical and qualitative methods for characterising performance of environmental models are reviewed. ► A structured, iterative workflow that combines several evaluation methods is suggested. ► Selection of methods must be tailored to the model scope and purpose, and quality of data and information available.
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  • 4
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 449 . pp. 85-92.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-15
    Description: Small marine decapods often associatewith other invertebrates in order to gain protection frompredators. However, the factors that influence host choice by symbionts, such as shrimps, are poorly understood but may have important implications for the distribution and abundance of these mesoconsumers. In Hong Kong, the rhynchocinetid shrimp Rhynchocinetes brucei uses two alternative hosts: an urchin (Diadema setosum) and an anemone (Entacmaea quadricolor).We examined the association between R. brucei and its anemone and urchin hosts in the field and laboratory, investigating host choice and host fidelity. Underwater surveys on shallowrocky reefs in Hong Kong revealed that shrimps were rarely found outside refuges, such as crevices and holes, unless they were associated with anemones and urchins. Shrimps were more frequently associated with urchins than with anemones, although anemones were more abundant within the survey area. Host-choice experiments in the laboratory confirmed that, when given a choice, shrimps avoided open areas and associated with anemones, urchins or artificial refuges. Shrimps overwhelmingly chose urchins over artificial refuges, but did not show any clear preference for anemones over refuges. When offered a choice, shrimps displayed fidelity for their original host species (i.e. the host with which they were associated when collected from the field), suggesting that they imprinted upon the host. Host-imprinting may allow symbionts to efficiently relocate their original host species after separation (e.g. following nocturnal foraging trips) thereby, perhaps, reducing the risk of predation. However, host preference by R. brucei was facultative because shrimps would associate with an unfamiliar host when their original host was unavailable. This flexibility may allowshrimps to respond to local variability in host abundance. Host-use patterns and factors influencing the choice between anemone and urchin hosts by a caridean shrimp. Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/257882112_Host-use_patterns_and_factors_influencing_the_choice_between_anemone_and_urchin_hosts_by_a_caridean_shrimp [accessed Oct 06 2017].
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2015-10-13
    Description: The identification of areas of natural gas hydrate occurrence, defining its concentration and regional distribution, as well as understanding the processes that control gas hydrate formation is a crucial component of regional gas hydrate assessments. In this study, we incorporate an additional element into a regional assessment strategy by including the depositional environment defined through seismic facies classes. The seismic facies classification is attempted using regional 2D seismic data and a 3D seismic volume, as well as core and log-data from two gas hydrate drilling expeditions carried out in the Ulleung Basin, East Sea, to conduct a fully integrated gas hydrate assessment. The facies classification described in this study is part of a procedure to conduct an assessment including: (1) Lithologic description of the recovered core and describe the deposition character of the sediment facies identified; (2) seismic facies classification using 2D and 3D seismic data and their derived various seismic attributes; (3) Linking seismic facies classes to core-derived sedimentological descriptions to define the host-strata most favourable for gas hydrate occurrences; (4) Defining reservoir physical properties and linking these to seismic facies classes for reservoir property description; (5) Calculating regional elements of the gas hydrate petroleum system (top of gas hydrate occurrence and base of gas hydrate stability); (6) Merging seismic facies and reservoir properties, definition of the top and base of the gas hydrate stability zone, to calculate gas hydrate saturations in each seismic facies and the total volume of gas hydrate present in the study area; (7) Defining probabilistic elements of the predicted volume of gas hydrate by combining statistical information of the individual input parameters through exhaustive Monte Carlo simulations. The seismic facies classification algorithm used in this study is based on identifying clusters (classes) that show similar properties in the seismic data and derived attribute characteristics. Our classification scheme uses seven seismic attributes (amplitude, instantaneous frequency and amplitude (also referred to as envelope), sweetness, acoustic impedance, thin-bed- and parallel-bedding indicator) and incorporates the use of principle component analysis for data reduction. The achieved classifications are overall robust and yield identical facies classes for the co-located 2D and 3D data. Linking the seismic facies classes to the recovered core and sedimentological descriptions results in a sedimentological interpretation of the seismic facies. Cross-plots of individual components as well as analysing the Eigen-vectors and -values from the principle component analysis (PCA) helps understand the physical meaning of these seismic facies classes and their seismic character. The five facies classes assigned to the 3D volume and 2D seismic line after PCA represent the mass transport deposit (MTD) units (class #1), hemipelagic mud with some sandy turbidite (class #2), hemipelagic mud with many sandy turbidites (class #3), as well as water-bearing mud with few sand layers and occurring mostly at shallow depth near the seafloor or beneath the base of the gas hydrate stability zone (classes #4 and #5). Within the study area and seismic data sets used, gas hydrate occurrences are only linked to facies classes #2 and #3.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-11-04
    Description: The Second Ulleung Basin Gas Hydrate Drilling Expedition (UBGH2) recovered various forms of gas-hydrate bearing sediments from 10 drill sites in the lower slope and basin floor of the Ulleung Basin. To characterize the gas-hydrate occurrences and the properties of the host sediments, whole-round core samples were taken from portions of recovered cores determined to be hydrate-bearing based on infrared (IR) scanning. These samples were further characterized by a variety of shipboard experiments such as imaging of the sediments with hand-held IR and visual cameras, measurements of pore water chlorinity within and around IR inferred cold regions in the core and grain-size analysis of pore-water squeeze cakes. Sediment compositions of selected samples were further characterized by X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopes during post-cruise analysis. The shipboard and post-cruise analysis results collectively indicate that the recovered gas hydrates mainly occur as 1) “pore-filling” type bounded by discrete silty sand to sandy silt layers, 2) “fracture-filling” veins and nodules, or 3) “disseminated” type in silt. In addition, minor but significant variation in gas hydrate concentrations were observed in diatomaceous silt where gas hydrates occur as “pore-filling” material in layers dominated by intact diatom frustules. Gas hydrate accumulations of “fracture-filling” type occur predominantly in regions where acoustic blanking features in the seismic record suggest gas migration from below the gas hydrate stability zone. Results from the UBGH2 core studies along with the analysis of similar samples from other expeditions, including those executed by the Ocean Drilling Program, the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, and the First Ulleung Basin Gas Hydrate Drilling Expedition, greatly improved our understanding of lithologic controls on marine gas hydrate occurrences.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2015-11-17
    Description: Sulfate-dependent anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is the key sedimentary microbial process limiting methane emissions from marine sediments and methane seeps. In this study, we investigate how the presence of low-organic content sediment influences the capacity and efficiency of AOM at Bullseye vent, a gas hydrate-bearing cold seep offshore of Vancouver Island, Canada. The upper 8 m of sediment contains 〈0.4 wt.% total organic carbon (OC) and primarily consists of glacially-derived material that was deposited 14,900–15,900 yrs BP during the retreat of the late Quaternary Cordilleran Ice Sheet. We hypothesize this aged and exceptionally low-OC content sedimentary OM is biologically refractory, thereby limiting degradation of non-methane OM by sulfate reduction and maximizing methane consumption by sulfate-dependent AOM. A radiocarbon-based dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) isotope mass balance model demonstrates that respired DIC in sediment pore fluids is derived from a fossil carbon source that is devoid of 14C. A fossil origin for the DIC precludes remineralization of non-fossil OM present within the sulfate zone as a significant contributor to pore water DIC, suggesting that nearly all sulfate is available for anaerobic oxidation of fossil seep methane. Methane flux from the SMT to the sediment water interface in a diffusion-dominated flux region of Bullseye vent was, on average, 96% less than at an OM-rich seep in the Gulf of Mexico with a similar methane flux regime. Evidence for enhanced methane oxidation capacity within OM-poor sediments has implications for assessing how climate-sensitive reservoirs of sedimentary methane (e.g., gas hydrate) will respond to ocean warming, particularly along glacially-influenced mid and high latitude continental margins.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-01-06
    Description: During drilling in 2010 in the Ulleung Basin, East Sea, Logging-While-Drilling (LWD) was conducted for thirteen sites. LWD data shows various characteristics indicating presence of gas hydrate-bearing sediments. In particular, a series seismic chimney sites are characterized by anomalous log data (i.e. high resistivity and velocity values), compared to surrounding marine sediments. At chimney sites, the resistivity and velocity log values are over 200 Ω-m and 3000 m/s, respectively. Moreover, log values of low density (less than 1.1 g/cm3) indicating the presence of massive hydrates also correlate with intervals with the highest resistivity and velocity. Gas hydrates at the seismic inferred chimney sites occurred within inclined fractures in the mud dominated sediments. These gas hydrate-filled fractures were identified on LWD resistivity images and X-ray images of pressure cores. The gas hydrate-filled fracture intervals coincide with high measured resistivity intervals at three sites (Sites UBGH2-3, UBGH2-7, UBGH2-11). In most cases, high measured resistivity translated into high hydrate saturations via Archie's relationship; but the high saturations derived from the Archie's relationship appear to overestimate gas hydrate saturations when compared to pressure core samples and acoustic log measurements. Also, in intervals with inclined gas hydrate-filled fractures (e.g., UBGH2-3), there is notable separation between phase-shift and attenuation resistivity logs, with 2 MHz resistivity measurements being significantly higher than 400 kHz resistivity measurements. In this study, the analysis of fractures with dip angles greater than 30° on the resistivity log-images show dip angles between 43 and 63° in average for the three sites examined. The dip azimuth of the fractures at Sites UBGH2-3 and UBGH2-7 dominate westerly to southwestern direction, while the fractures at Site UBGH2-11 are characterized by no preferred orientation. This fracture pattern indicates that maximum horizontal stress direction at the time of fracture formation was not constant. In addition, the differential compaction of the sediments after deposited may be contributed to the development of fracture.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-01-23
    Description: A small-scale oceanic eddy, which was generated in autumn 2011 at the headland of Cap-Vert off the coast of Senegal, West Africa, and then propagated westward into the open North Atlantic Ocean, is studied by multi-sensor satellite and surface drifter data. The eddy was generated after a sudden increase of the trade winds causing an enhanced southward flow and upwelling at the coast of Senegal. After this wind burst event, an extremely nonlinear cyclonic eddy with a radius of about 10 to 20 km evolved downstream of Cap-Vert with Rossby number larger than one. Our analysis suggests that the eddy was generated by flow separation at the headland of Cap-Vert. The eddy was tracked on its way into the open North Atlantic Ocean from satellites over 31 days via its sea surface temperature and chlorophyll-a (CHL) signature and by a satellite-tracked surface drifter. The satellite images show that this small-scale eddy transported nutrients from the upwelling region westward into the oligotrophic North Atlantic thus giving rise to enhanced CHL concentration there. Maximum CHL concentration was encountered few days after vortex generation, which is consistent with a delayed plankton growth following nutrient supply into the euphotic zone within the eddy. Furthermore, the eddy was imaged by the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) onboard the Envisat satellite. It is shown that the radar signatures of cold eddies result from damping of short surface waves by biogenic surface films which arise from surface-active material secreted by the biota in the cold eddy as well as by the change of the stability of the air–sea interface. Highlights: ► Processes during the onset of coastal upwelling off West Africa ► Multi-sensor remote sensing and in-situ observations ► Highly-nonlinear, small scale eddy generation at Cap-Vert ► NRCS reduction in parts of the eddy due to biogenic surface films
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Subduction zone earthquakes are known to create segmented patches of co-seismic rupture along-strike of a margin. Offshore Sumatra, repeated rupture occurred within segments bounded by permanent barriers, whose origin however is still not fully understood. In this study we image the structural variations across the rupture segment boundary between the Mw 9.1 December 26, 2004 and the Mw 8.6 March 28, 2005 Sumatra earthquakes. A set of collocated reflection and wide-angle seismic profiles are available on both sides of the segment boundary, located offshore Simeulue Island. We present the results of the seismic tomography modeling of wide-angle ocean bottom data, enhanced with MCS data and gravity modeling for the southern 2005 segment of the margin and compare it to the published model for the 2004 northern segment. Our study reveals principal differences in the structure of the subduction system north and south of the segment boundary, attributed to the subduction of 96°E fracture zone. The key differences include a change in the crustal thickness of the oceanic plate, a decrease in the amount of sediment in the trench as well as variations in the morphology and volume of the accretionary prism. These differences suggest that the 96°E fracture zone acts as an efficient barrier in the trench parallel sediment transport, as well as a divider between oceanic crustal blocks of different structure. The variability of seismic behavior is caused by the distinct changes in the morphology of the subduction complex across the boundary related to the difference in the sediment supply.
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