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  • 1
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    Springer
    In:  In: Competition and Coexistence. , ed. by Sommer, U. and Worm, B. Ecological Studies, 161 . Springer, Berlin, Germany, pp. 207-218. ISBN 978-3-642-62800-9
    Publication Date: 2017-01-26
    Description: Modern competition research started with G.E. Hutchinson’s, Homage to Santa Rosalia, and his now-famous question “why are there so many species?” (Hutchinson 1959,1961). This confronted observed species richness with the competitive exclusion principle, a principle that had been derived from theory and from highly artificial experiments. It would always have been easy to point at the “artificial” character of the competitive exclusion principle. Indeed many researchers have refused to deal with Hutchinson’s question because they considered it a pseudo-problem, which arose from a contradiction between overly simplified theory and complicated reality. However, those who took Hutchinson’s challenge seriously have gained fundamental insights into how competition plays out in nature, how species coexist, and how communities function. In this final chapter we attempt to synthesize these insights as they have been presented in this book. We focus on six key topics: - Identification of major trade-off axes (Sect. 8.1) - Confirmation of the “intermediate disturbance hypothesis”, and detection of interactions among competition, resource supply, predation and disturbance in field experiments (Sect. 8.2) - The interplay of space colonization, dispersal and neighborhood competition in sessile communities (Sect. 8.3) - Potential for chaotic, self-generated heterogeneity in communities (Sect. 8.4) - Role of exclusive resources in competition among mobile animals (Sect. 8.5) - Coexistence by slow exclusion (Sect. 8.6)
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  • 2
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . p. 8.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-28
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  • 3
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . p. 7.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-28
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: According to small subunit ribosomal RNA (ss rRNA) sequence comparisons all known Archaea belong to the phyla Crenarchaeota, Euryarchaeota, and—indicated only by environmental DNA sequences—to the 'Korarchaeota'1, 2. Here we report the cultivation of a new nanosized hyperthermophilic archaeon from a submarine hot vent. This archaeon cannot be attached to one of these groups and therefore must represent an unknown phylum which we name 'Nanoarchaeota' and species, which we name 'Nanoarchaeum equitans'. Cells of 'N. equitans' are spherical, and only about 400 nm in diameter. They grow attached to the surface of a specific archaeal host, a new member of the genus Ignicoccus3. The distribution of the 'Nanoarchaeota' is so far unknown. Owing to their unusual ss rRNA sequence, members remained undetectable by commonly used ecological studies based on the polymerase chain reaction4. 'N. equitans' harbours the smallest archaeal genome; it is only 0.5 megabases in size. This organism will provide insight into the evolution of thermophily, of tiny genomes and of interspecies communication.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: Massive microbial mats covering up to 4-meter-high carbonate buildups prosper at methane seeps in anoxic waters of the northwestern Black Sea shelf. Strong 13C depletions indicate an incorporation of methane carbon into carbonates, bulk biomass, and specific lipids. The mats mainly consist of densely aggregated archaea (phylogenetic ANME-1 cluster) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (Desulfosarcina/Desulfococcusgroup). If incubated in vitro, these mats perform anaerobic oxidation of methane coupled to sulfate reduction. Obviously, anaerobic microbial consortia can generate both carbonate precipitation and substantial biomass accumulation, which has implications for our understanding of carbon cycling during earlier periods of Earth's history.
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  • 6
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    China Ocean Press
    In:  Acta Oceanologica Sinica, 21 (2). pp. 187-202.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-20
    Description: A fine-resolution MOM code is used to study the South China Sea basin-scale circulation and its relation to the mass transport through the Luzon Strait. The model domain includes the South China Sea, part of the East China Sea, and part of the Philippine Sea so that the currents in the vicinity of the Luzon Strait are free to evolve. In addition, all channels between the South China Sea and the Indonesian seas are closed so that the focus is on the Luzon Strait transport. The model is driven by specified Philippine Sea currents and by surface heat and salt flux conditions. For simplicity, no windstress is applied at the surface. The simulated Luzon Strait transport and the South China Sea circulation feature a sandwich vertical structure from the surface to the bottom. The Philippine Sea water is simulated to enter the South China Sea at the surface and in the deep ocean and is carried to the southern basin by western boundary currents. At the intermediate depth, the net Luzon Strait transport is out of the South China Sea and is fed by a western boundary current flowing to the north at the base of the thermocline. Corresponding to the western boundary currents, the basin circulation of the South China Sea is cyclonic gyres at the surface and in the abyss but an anti-cyclonic gyre at the intermediate depth. The vorticity balance of the gyre circulation is between the vortex stretching and the meridional change of the planetary vorticity. Based on these facts, it is hypothesized that the Luwn Strait transports are detennined by the diapycnal mixing inside the entire South China Sea. The South China Sea plays the role of a "mixing mill" that mixes the surface and deep waters to return them to the Luzon Strait at the intermediate depth. The gyre structures are consistent with the Stommel and Arons theory (1960), which suggests that the mixing- induced circulation inside the South China Sea should be cyclonic gyres at the surface and at the bottom but an anti-cyclonic gyre at the intermediate depth. The simulated gyre circulation at the intermediate depth has been confirmed by the dynamic height calculation based on the Levitus hydrography data. The sandwich transports in the Luzon Strait are consistent with recent hydrographical observations. Model results suggest that the Kuroshio tends to form a loop current in the northeastern South China Sea. The simulated Kuroshio Loop Current is generated by the pressure head at the Pacific side of the Luwn Strait and is enhanced by the ß-plane effects. The ß-plane appears to be of paramount importance to the South China Sea circulation and to the Luwn Strait transports. Without the ß-plane, the Luzon Strait transports would be greatly reduced and the South China Sea circulation would be complete- ly different.
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  • 7
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    In:  Hydro International, 6 (7). pp. 57-59.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-05
    Description: Marine GeoSolutions (Pty) Ltd was contracted by the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa to undertake a multibeam bathymetric survey of the northern KwaZulu-Natal submarine canyon system to define potential coelacanth habitats for the SA Coelacanth Conservation and Genome Resource Programme. Five survey blocks were defined to include all the known submarine canyons in the area. The survey blocks were systematically surveyed to develop a series of colour-draped bathymetric maps and three-dimensional models of the canyons. These maps were then used to provide information for potential submersible dive sites and produce the basal layer of a marine GIS (Geographical Information System).
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  • 8
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    Deutsches Meeresmuseum
    In:  In: Historisch-meereskundliches Jahrbuch / History of Oceanography Yearbook. Deutsches Meeresmuseum, Stralsund, Germany, pp. 81-100. ISBN 0943-5697
    Publication Date: 2017-09-12
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    Nijhoff
    In:  Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law, 6 . pp. 473-534.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-08
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  • 10
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    In:  (Professorial dissertation), Christan-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel, 257 pp
    Publication Date: 2018-03-27
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 11
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    Elsevier
    In:  International Journal of Solids and Structures, 39 (13-14). pp. 3337-3357.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-24
    Description: Two modes of decrease in load bearing capacity of granular materials are discussed in view of experimental results. Both relate to the fact that frictional materials exhibit nonassociated plastic flow and they undergo considerable volume changes, either contraction or dilation. One mode consists of the instability that may occur in certain regions of stress space and potentially result in liquefaction of the granular material. It is the fact that loading of contracting soil (resulting in large plastic strains) can occur under decreasing stresses that may lead to unstable behavior under undrained conditions. As long as the soil remains drained, it will remain stable in the region of potential instability. The other mode is initiated by localization of plastic strains and subsequent development of shear bands, which in granular materials is followed by a decrease in load bearing capacity. These two modes are mutually exclusive and they occur for different loading and material conditions as discussed here on the basis of experimental observations.
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  • 12
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . pp. 3-6.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-17
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  • 13
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . pp. 12-16.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-23
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  • 14
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 115 (3-4). pp. 411-435.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: Volcanology has been in the past and in many respects remains a subject dominated by pure research grounded in the earth sciences. Over the past 30 years a paradigm shift has occurred in hazard assessment which has been aided by significant changes in the social theory of natural hazards and the first-hand experience gained in the 1990s by volcanologists working on projects conceived during the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction (IDNDR). Today much greater stress is placed on human vulnerability, the potential for marginalisation of disadvantaged individuals and social groups, and the requirement to make applied volcanology sensitive to the characteristics of local demography, economy, culture and politics. During the IDNDR a methodology, broadly similar to environmental impact analysis, has emerged as the preferred method for studying human vulnerability and risk assessment in volcanically active regions. The characteristics of this new methodology are discussed and the progress which has been made in innovating it on the European Union laboratory volcanoes located in western Europe is reviewed. Furnas (São Miguel, Azores) and Vesuvius in Italy are used as detailed case studies.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2017-07-18
    Description: In order to explain biological zonation, shore height above the ordnance level is frequently used as an indicator of the abiotic gradient in intertidal ecosystems. This is based on the implicit assumption that shore height is directly correlated with inundation frequency and/or duration. Despite the importance of inundation for tidal ecosystems, measurements have rarely been taken directly by measuring inundation at the site of investigation. We measured mean high tide (MHT) and flooding frequency at three sites on the Dutch Barrier Island of Schiermonnikoog. To assess the scale dependence, we compared local measurements with the estimated inundation frequencies based on the official tide gauge (OTG) farther away. Locally measured MHT water levels differed among sites and were consistently higher than estimated MHT water levels. With this data, we subsequently estimated the inundation frequency of vegetation plots from our measurements and correlated it with species distribution. In a logistic regression inundation frequency accounted for twice the variance in explaining the dominance of three salt marsh species than shore height. The discrepancy in annual inundation frequency of the vegetation between sites was ≦300% for a given shore height. Within each site replicated estimates of inundation frequency proved to be consistent (scale 10–50 m). Estimated and measured inundation frequencies thus reliably correlated at a small-scale (tens of metres), but not at a larger scale (hundreds of metres to kilometres). If inundation frequency is used as an explanatory variable, it will therefore be advisable to consider the spatial heterogeneity of the measurements, in particular if different sites are to be compared. We give mean inundation frequencies of three dominant salt marsh species (Elymus athericus, Festuca rubra, Artemisia maritima) measured over 1 year.
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  • 16
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    Laser Pages Publishing
    In:  Israel Journal of Zoology, 48 (1). pp. 33-42.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-28
    Description: The presence of Solidobalanus auricoma (Cirripedia; Balanoidea) in the Red Sea at a depth of 112 m is reported, and its morphology is described. S. auricoma is a relatively deep water barnacle known from the Persian Gulf through Malaysia, southeastern Australia, and northeastern New Zealand at depths of 27 to 320 m. This is its first record from the Red Sea. The present finding of S. auricoma in the Gulf of Elat (Aqaba) extends the boundaries of its geographic distribution farther west and north.
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  • 17
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    Academy of Science of South Africa
    In:  South African Journal of Science, 98 (3-4). pp. 181-185.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-26
    Description: During mini-submersible dives in De Beers offshore concessions on the middle shelf of Namaqualand, on the west coast of South Africa, a fossil forest was located and sampled. Over an area of 2 km2 there are numerous in situ and prostrate trunks on a gentle slope, 136-140 m below sea level and about 32 km offshore. Micro-palaeontological dating shows that the sediments are of Coniacian age. The silicified woods have been identified as members of the Podocarpaceae and one new species is described, Podocarpoxylon jago Bamford & Stevenson sp. nov. The second species identified is P. umzambense Schultze-Motel. These woods are compared with other west coast woods, both onshore and offshore, and the Upper Cretaceous coastal environment is postulated.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2017-09-06
    Description: Videotapes collected by the research submersible Jago in the Benguela ecosystem during spring 1997 were analyzed to determine demersal nekton assemblage composition, fish behavior, and microscale habitat association, and habitat selection. Demersal fish assemblage diversity was generally low, and their composition was a function of substratum type. Individual species showed an often marked association with either rocky or soft substrata (or both), and a strong or weak selection for the associated biota. Soles and dragonets actively selected areas of bioactive soft substrata, to which they are behaviorally and morphologically adapted. False jacopever were associated with crevices in areas of high-relief rocky substrata. Kingklip are piscivorous and were largely confined to holes at the base of rocks and favored areas without a conspicuous epifauna. Juvenile hake and gobies avoided extremely rocky areas and were largely indifferent to the presence of benthic invertebrates—behavior that is consistent with their planktonic diets. These results represent the first direct observations of demersal nekton in the region and are important because they allow better interpretations of the results of trawl studies.
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  • 19
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    In:  [Paper] In: ICES Annual Science Conference 2002, 01.10.-05.10.2002, Oslo, Norway .
    Publication Date: 2017-09-22
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  • 20
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    Elsevier
    In:  Russian Geology and Geophysics, 43 (7). pp. 599-604.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-11
    Description: A geographically related database called MAGIC has been developed, using GIS (Geographic Information System) technology, for MArine Gas seeps and seep IndiCators. A complementary bibliographic database (GASREF) stores details of related publications. The databases include data relating to natural seabed gas seeps and features such as pockmarks, cold seep communities, and methane-derived carbonates which are known to be found in association with seeps. The databases are compiled from published reports (so far restricted to those written in English), and users are able to interrogate the system for specified features from user-defined areas.
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  • 21
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Marine Issues. Kluwer, Den Haag, pp. 203-220.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-23
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  • 22
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    Kluwer
    In:  Non-State Actors and International Law, 2 . pp. 279-300.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-22
    Description: Marine biological resources in general and biological resources of the deep sea and the deep seabed in particular are threatened by a variety of human activities. Those activities considered marine scientific research and related activities such as scientific sampling and bioprospecting can pose a threat to the conservation of these biological resources if performed in an unrestricted manner. Whether legal rules on marine scientific research should be applicable to highly commercial activities such as bioprospecting is doubtful. The current legal regulations provided by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Convention on Biological Diversity are not designed to provide for an adequate regime on the protection of biological resources in areas located outside national sovereignty. As a result, a new treaty on the protection and sustainable use of marine biological resources located outside national jurisdiction is necessary and must focus upon a common heritage approach. An institutional framework for such a regime can either be newly established together with an agreement or be established by an existing institution e.g. the International Seabed Authority.
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  • 23
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . p. 10.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-28
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  • 24
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . p. 11.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-28
    Description: Im Bereich der westlichen Grönlandsee wurde bisher nur die gesamte Megafauna hinsichtlich ihrer Abundanzen und Besiedlungsmustem in der Literatur beschrieben und nicht zwischen einzelnen Substraten unterschieden. Dies geschah ausschließlich auf dem ebenen Meeresboden und nicht innerhalb von geologischen Strukturen, wie z.B. Rinnensystemen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Abundanzen und Verteilungsmuster für die Hartsubstratfauna und die eng mit dem Hartsubstrat assoziierte Fauna in der Rinne vor Grönland beschrieben.
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  • 25
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    Institut für Polarökologie Kiel
    In:  Mitteilungen zur Kieler Polarforschung, 18 . p. 9.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-28
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2017-05-05
    Description: The Catalina Schist (California) contains an amphibolite-grade (0.8–1.1 GPa; 640–750 jC) melange unit consisting of mafic and ultramafic blocks in high-Mg, schistose melange matrix with varying modal proportions of talc, chlorite, anthophyllite, calcic-amphibole, enstatite, and minor phases including zircon, rutile, apatite, spinel, and Fe–Ni sulfides. This melange unit is interpreted as a kilometer-scale zone of tectonic and metasomatic mixing formed within a juvenile subduction zone, the study of which may yield insight into chemical mixing processes at greater depths in subduction zones. Relationships among the major and trace element compositions of the mafic and ultramafic blocks in the melange, the rinds developed at the margins of these blocks, and the surrounding melange matrix are compatible with the evolution of the melange matrix through a complex combination of infiltrative and diffusional metasomatism and a process resembling mechanical mixing. Simple, linear mixing models are compatible with the development of the melange matrix primarily through simple mixture of the ultramafic and mafic rocks, with Cr/Al ratios serving as indicators of the approximate proportions of the two lithologies. This conclusion regarding mafic–ultramafic mixing is consistent with the field observations and chemical trends indicating strong resemblance of large parts of the melange matrix with rinds developed at the margins of mafic and ultramafic blocks. The overall process involved development of metasomatic assemblages through complex fluid-mediated mixing of the blocks and matrix concurrent with deformation of these relatively weak rind materials, which are rich in layer silicates and amphibole. This deformation was sufficiently intense to transpose fabrics, progressively disaggregate more rigid, block-derived materials in weaker chorite- and talc-rich melange, and in some particularly weak lithologies (e.g., chlorite-, talc-, and amphibole-rich materials), intimately juxtapose adjacent lithologies at the (sub-)cm scale (approaching grain scale) sampled by the whole-rock geochemical analyses. Chemical systematics of various elements in the melange matrix can be delineated based on the Cr/Al-based mixing model. Simple mixing relationships exhibited by Al, Cr, Mg, Ni, Fe, and Zr provide a geochemical reference frame for considerations of mass and volume loss and gain within the melange matrix. The compositional patterns of many other elements are explained by either redistribution (local stripping or enrichment) at varying scales within the melange (Ca, Na, K, Ba, and Sr) or massive addition from external sources (Si and H2O), the latter probably in infiltrating H2O-rich fluids that produced the dramatic O and H isotopic shifts in the melange. Melange formation, resulting in the production of high-variance ultramafic assemblages withhigh volatile contents, may aid retention of volatiles (in this case, H2O) to greater depths in subduction zones than in original subducted mafic and sedimentary materials. The presence of such assemblages (i.e., containing minerals such as talc, chlorite, and Mg-rich amphiboles) would impact the rheology of the slab–mantle interface and perhaps contribute to the low-velocity seismic structure observed at/near the slab–mantle interface in some subduction zones. If operative along the slab–mantle interface, complex mixing processes such as these, involving the interplay between fluid-mediated metasomatism and deformation, also could impact slab incompatible trace element and isotopic signatures ultimately observed in arc magmas, producing ‘‘fluids’’ with geochemical signatures inherited from interactions with hybridized rock compositions.
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  • 27
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    University of Miami - Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
    In:  Bulletin of Marine Science, 71 . p. 1164.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-18
    Description: A detailed analysis of lower rostral beak length (LRL) to body size and wet body mass measurements was carried out for the squids Loligo forbesi, Todarodes sagittatus and Todaropsis eblanae. Specimens were sampled in the northern North Sea during two research cruises of FRV WALTHER HERWIG III in January/February of 1998 and 1999. Altogether 241 specimens of Loligo forbesi (ML = 45–376 mm), 108 specimens of Todarodes sagittatus (ML = 173–325 mm) and 97 specimens of Todaropsis eblanae (ML = 30–127 mm) were investigated to correlate lower rostral beak length with both mantle length and wet body mass. Linear relationships between LRL and mantle length and powerfunctional relationships between LRL and wet body mass were calculated for all three species. By calculating these correlations separately for males and females, no obvious sex-specific relationships were found. The presented data will upgrade the information on beak/mantle length/body mass relationships of major cephalopod species of the North Sea. They provide essential information for future use in estimates of cephalopod prey biomass in North East Atlantic top predators such as whales, seals, seabirds and fishes.
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  • 28
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    In:  UNSPECIFIED, 43 pp.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-26
    Description: Dates, Ports: 26.6.2002 (Reykjavik) – 2.7.2002 (Akureyri) – 14.7.2002 (Reykjavik), Research subject: Hydrothermal studies of Grimsey Field, volcanic studies of Kolbeinsey Ridge, Chief Scientist: Prof. Dr. Colin W. Devey, Univ. Bremen, Number of Scientists: 22 (2 legs), Project: DFG De572/14-1 Fracture Zone
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2020-05-11
    Description: 14C/C ratios in samples from radial transects across individual thalli of Caloplaca trachyphylla collected at two sites were measured and the results used to investigate whether 14C/C data might provide some insight into the magnitude of carbon turnover in this lichen species. The 14C/C data suggest that significant internal recycling/translocation of carbon is unlikely in the sampled thalli. However, converting the 14C/C data for the larger intact thalli sampled at each site to calendar years, using the atmospheric 14C record, does not yield constant or even monotonically varying growth rates. Since crustose lichen growth rates are constant or decrease with thallus size, and since the 14C/C data from these larger thalli show a relatively small spread in 14C/C data values compared to the Northern Hemisphere atmospheric 14C record over the past 50 years, the 14C/C data suggest that carbon turnover may be occurring. Carbon turnover was modelled starting with the atmospheric 14C record. Turnover was incorporated so that for each year in the record a constant percentage of the total carbon was lost annually and replaced by new photosynthetically fixed carbon with a 14C/C ratio equal to that of the contemporary atmosphere. The 14C/C data from the radial samples were then converted to a calendar year using the model record. Constant annual carbon turnover values of 0, 0·5, 1, 1·5, 2, 2·5, 3, 3·5, 4, 4·5, 5, 5·5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 50% were modelled. Carbon turnover values between 3 and 6% created 14C model records that when applied to 14C/C data from the thalli produced constant radial growth rates that were: (1) identical for all lichens at a given site, and (2) independent of lichen size at a given site. The 14C/C data further indicate that annual carbon turnover in this species of lichen is 〈10%, independent of the nature of thallus radial growth. The data and modelling suggest that carbon turnover might provide a simple explanation for the 14C/C data from the thalli and might explain the discrepancies between the standard atmospheric 14C record and the 14C/C ratios observed in C. trachyphylla.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2018-05-29
    Description: Peridotite xenoliths from the Quaternary Cerro del Fraile basalts, southernmost South America, sample the mantle less than 25 km east of the Andean Austral Volcanic Zone (AVZ), an arc segment characterized by melting of a young, 'hot', subducted slab and the eruption of adakites. Many of these peridotite xenoliths are modified by either modal and/or cryptic Na-rich metasomatism, which produced elevated Sr/Y, La/Yb and La/Nb ratios typical of slab melts. Some of the metasomatized xenoliths, derived from a relatively deep and hot portion of the mantle, contain an interconnected network along mineral grain boundaries of high-Mg#, low-Y andesitic glass with major and trace element composition similar to the high-Mg adakites erupted in the AVZ. We interpret this adakitic glass to be a quenched slab melt that has infiltrated the mantle wedge from below. The texture and chemistry of this quenched melt and surrounding mantle minerals suggest that selective assimilation of predominately mantle clinopyroxene, some spinel and minor olivine is an important process in producing high-Mg adakites from primary low-Mg slab melts.
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  • 31
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    North American Benthological Society
    In:  Journal of The North American Benthological Society, 21 (3). pp. 349-369.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-28
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  • 32
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    Unknown
    American Chemistry Society
    In:  Environmental Science & Technology, 26 . pp. 5441-5446.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-07
    Description: Direct oceanic disposal of fossil fuel CO2 is being considered as a possible means to moderate the growth rate of CO2 in the atmosphere. We have measured the rise rate and dissolution rate of freely released CO2 droplets in the open ocean to provide fundamental data for carbon sequestration options. A small amount of liquid CO2 was released at 800 m, at 4.4 degrees C, and the rising droplet stream was imaged with a HDTV camera carried on a remotely operated vehicle. The initial rise rate for 0.9-cm diameter droplets was 10 cm/s at 800 m, and the dissolution rate was 3.0 micromol cm(-2) s(-1). While visual contact was maintained for 1 h and over a 400 m ascent, 90% of the mass loss occurred within 30 min over a 200 m ascent above the release point. Images of droplets crossing the liquid-gas-phase boundary showed formation of a gas head, pinching off of a liquid tail, and rapid gas bubble separation and dissolution.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Central American arc volcanism shows strong regional trends in lava chemistry that result from differing slab contributions to arc melting. However, the mechanism that transfers slab-derived trace elements into the mantle wedge remains largely unknown. By using a dynamic model for mantle flow and fluid release, we model the fate of three different slab-fluid sources: sediment, ocean crust, and serpentinized mantle. In the open subarc system, sediments lose almost all their highly fluid mobile elements by ∼50 km depth, so other fluid sources are necessary to explain the slab signal in arc-lava compositions. The well-documented transition from lavas with a strong geochemical slab signature (i.e., high Ba/La ratios) found in Nicaragua to lavas with a weaker slab signature (i.e., low Ba/La ratios) erupted in Costa Rica seems easiest to produce by a higher fraction of serpentine-hosted fluids released from the deeply faulted, highly serpentinized lithosphere subducting beneath Nicaragua than from the less deeply faulted, thicker, amphibolitic oceanic-crust and oceanic-plateau lithosphere subducting beneath Costa Rica.
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  • 34
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    Unknown
    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 59 . pp. 2951-2965.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-16
    Description: This study investigates and accounts for the influence of various ice cloud parameters on the retrieval of the surface solar radiation budget (SSRB) from reflected flux at the top of the atmosphere (TOA). The optical properties of ice clouds depend on ice crystal shape, size distribution, water content, and the vertical profiles of geometric and microphysical structure. As a result, the relationship between the SSRB and TOA-reflected flux for an ice cloud atmosphere is more complex and differs from that for water cloud and cloudless atmospheres. The sensitivities of the relationship between the SSRB and TOA-reflected flux are examined with respect to various ice cloud parameters. Uncertainties in the retrieval of the SSRB due to inadequate knowledge of various ice cloud parameters are evaluated thoroughly. The uncertainty study is concerned with both pure ice clouds and multiphase clouds (ice cloud above water cloud). According to the magnitudes of errors in the SSRB retrieval caused by different input variables, parameterized correction terms were introduced. If the input variables are known accurately, errors in the retrieval of the SSRB under a wide range of ice cloud conditions are expected to diminish substantially, to less than 10 W m−2 for 91% of the simulated ice cloud cases. In comparison, the same accuracy may be attained for only 19% of the retrievals for the same ice cloud cases using the retrieval algorithm designed for non-ice-cloud conditions.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2017-12-06
    Description: Fluid and melt inclusions in minerals of two native iron-bearing dyke rocks from Disko, Greenland, were investigated using heating and cooling microscopic techniques. The melt inclusions in olivine are homogenized at temperatures of 1170–1200 °C. The melts are characterized by high SiO2, K2O and TiO2 and low MgO contents. The co-existence of combined melt–fluid (gas) inclusions in olivine implies that the olivine phenocrysts crystallized from a heterogeneous magma at low pressure. Gas bubbles were investigated in the glass of the rock. Water and four crystalline phases were observed at room and low temperatures on the walls of the bubbles: serpentine, naphthalene, clathrate, and an unknown phase. The complex composition of trapped volatiles is reflected in considerable ranges of clathrate melting and solidus temperatures (20 to 7.5 °C and −82.6 to −73 °C, respectively). Melt equilibrium with metallic iron at T=1450 K suggests that logfO2=−13.95. The calculated composition of C–O–H fluid in equilibrium with Fe, Fe3C and FeS is characterized by high CH4 and H2 contents. During cooling at the postmagmatic stage, polymerization proceeds, and heavy hydrocarbons are formed inside vesicles. The presence of organic compounds in inclusions trapped at a magmatic stage is a natural consequence of unusual reducing condition during crystallization.
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  • 36
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  In: Hydrocarbon seal quantification: papers presented at the Norwegian Petroleum Society conference, 16 - 18 October 2000, Stavanger, Norway. , ed. by Koestler, A. and Hunsdale, R. Special Publication Norwegian Petroleum Society, 11 . Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 37-50.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-11
    Description: We have developed a model of fluid flow and pressure development in sedimentary basins that incorporates pore volume loss due to mechanical compaction and to chemical diagenesis (quartz cementation, grain contact quartz dissolution and illitization). Mechanical compaction is modeled to be a function of effective stress. In this model, pore volume loss due to mechanical compaction will be retarded when overpressure develops. The diagenetic processes are modeled as being kinetically controlled and the reaction progress depends only on the temperature history. Hence pore volume loss due to chemical compaction is not retarded by overpressure. By including diagenetic effects on overpressure development, the pressure model should be more generally applicable than models that consider mechanical compaction to be the sole process that reduces porosity. To demonstrate the potential importance of chemical compaction in the formation of fluid overpressures in different settings, we calibrated our model with data obtained from the Halten Terrace offshore mid-Norway and from the Gulf of Mexico. In both cases, the diagenetic processes have the potential to control on the timing and magnitude of overpressuring. From 25% and up to 80% of the present-day overpressure may be caused by pore volume loss resulting from diagenetic reactions. Pressure build-up from diagenetic processes also potentially controls the timing of hydraulic fracturing. If diagenetic processes are actively contributing to overpressure generation, then unrealistically low shale permeabilities are not needed to retain overpressures for geologic time periods (〉10 My).
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2017-08-09
    Description: Hydrothermal gases from shallow seafloor vents in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand contain CO2, CH4, and the higher gaseous hydrocarbons up to i-, n-C4H10. The gases are similar to those discharged at fumaroles on the nearby White Island. Carbon isotope compositions for CO2 fall between −3.4‰ and −5.5‰ PDB and reflect a shallow magmatic carbon source. The δ13C values of CH4 range from −24.6‰ to −28.9‰ PDB and the δD values vary between −122‰ and −135‰ SMOW. The CH4 isotope values and the presence of the higher hydrocarbon compounds such as C2H6 and C3H8 with δ13C values near −20‰ PDB suggest hydrocarbon production by high-temperature maturation of sedimentary organic matter and mixing (∼1:1) of the thermogenic CH4 with abiogenic CH4. Long-chained hydrocarbons occur in dredged samples close to the active vents. Their n-alkane distribution has a high to moderate odd–even predominance and an extensive hopane series, indicative of higher land-plant waxes and prokaryotic membranes in the source. Substantial amounts of unsubstituted polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) mark the transition from aliphatic- to aromatic-dominated bitumens, consistent with extensive source maturation resulting from thermal stress. The bitumens are interpreted as pyrolysates derived from buried near-coastal vegetation and terrestrial detritus under various thermal regimes, mixed with immature seafloor organic matter.
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  • 38
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    Unknown
    Springer
    In:  International Journal of Earth Sciences, 91 . pp. 746-774.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: The geologic evidence for worldwide uplift of mountain ranges in the Neogene is ambiguous. Estimates of paleoelevation vary, according to whether they are based on the characteristics of fossil floras, on the masses and grain sizes of eroded sediments, or on calculations of increased thickness of the lithosphere as a result of faulting. Detrital erosion rates can be increased both by increased relief in the drainage basin and by a change to more seasonal rainfall patterns. The geologic record provides no clear answer to the question whether uplift caused the climatic deterioration of the Neogene or whether the changing climate affected the erosion system in such a way as to create an illusion of uplift. We suggest that the spread of C4 plants in the Late Miocene may have altered both the erosion and climate systems. These changes are responsible for the apparent contradictions between data supporting uplift and those supporting high elevations in the past.
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  • 39
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    EAGE
    In:  First Break, 20 (12). pp. 764-769.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-06
    Description: Introduction Since the discovery of ‘bright spots’ associated with hydrocarbon deposits, ever increasing interest in determining lithological subsurface parameters has been a driving force for technological development in the hydrocarbon exploration industry. Quantification of lithological parameters is of utmost importance for reservoir prediction and monitoring. Amongst various attempts to determine these, attribute analysis of pwave data and the direct observation of shear wave data are the most visible and successful methods applied. The direct observation of shear waves in the marine environment has been attempted by several means, mainly using ocean bottom cables (OBC) that have three-component geophones (3C) and a hydrophone in addition (thus 4C in total). Some manufacturers offer two component geophones with only one horizontal component. These cables are laid out on the seafloor, sometimes even buried using specialized tools like ROVs (remotely operated vehicles). Data transfer is through the cables as in streamers or land operations, recording is made on a boat or platform where the cable terminates. Geophones are housed in tubes with a self-levelling gimballed mounting system, damped by a viscous fluid. This technique is regarded as proven technology and has been widely accepted. Especially in production areas with many man-made obstacles, this technique also offers a safe operation, and is especially suitable for monitoring purposes (4D–4C seismic). Any desired geometry and density of receivers can be laid out. Direct shear wave observations have been made by several academic institutions, both for active seismic exploration as well as for passive seismological monitoring of earthquakes. These institutions have built ocean bottom seismometers (OBS), which are also four component, two sensor instruments. Unlike OBC, they are autonomously lowered to the seafloor, record within specified time windows, and are later brought back to the surface. Amongst the various instruments designed over the past decades is the OBS range built at GEOMAR, which – due to its modular design – has been used for a wide range of applications.
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  • 40
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    Unknown
    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 2 (7).
    Publication Date: 2018-01-30
    Description: [1] The structural and chemical evolution of palagonite was studied as a function of glass composition, alteration environment, and time by applying a range of analytical methods (electron microprobe, infrared photometry, atomic force microscopy, X-ray fluorescence, and X-ray diffraction). Palagonitization of volcanic glass is a continuous process of glass dissolution, palagonite formation, and palagonite evolution, which can be subdivided into two different reaction stages with changing element mobilities. The first stage is characterized by congruent dissolution of glass and contemporaneous precipitation of “fresh,” gel-like, amorphous, optically isotropic, mainly yellowish palagonite. This stage is accompanied by loss of Si, Al, Mg, Ca, Na, and K, active enrichment of H2O, and the passive enrichment of Ti and Fe. The second stage is an aging process during which the thermodynamically unstable palagonite reacts with the surrounding fluid and crystallizes to smectite. This stage is accompanied by uptake of Si, Al, Mg, and K from solution and the loss of Ti and H2O. Ca and Na are still showing losses, whereas Fe reacts less consistently, remaining either unchanged or showing losses. The degree and direction of element mobility during palagonitization was found to vary mainly with palagonite aging, as soon as the first precipitation of palagonite occurs. This is indicated by the contrasting major element signatures of palagonites of different aging steps, by the changes in the direction of element mobility with palagonite aging, and by the general decrease of element loss with increasing formation of crystalline substances in the palagonite. Considering the overall element budget of a water-rock system, the conversion of glass to palagonite is accompanied by much larger element losses than the overall alteration process, which includes the formation of secondary phases and palagonite aging. The least evolved palagonitized mafic glass studied has undergone as much as 65 wt% loss of elements during palagonite formation, compared to ∼28 wt% element loss during bulk alteration. ABout 33 wt% element loss was calculated for one of the more evolved, in terms of the aging degree, rocks studied, compared to almost no loss for bulk alteration.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2018-07-02
    Description: The response of rocky shore ecosystems to increased nutrient availability was examined in eight land-based mesocosms designed for hard-bottom littoral communities built at Marine Research Station Solbergstrand (Norway). The average seawater volume in each basin was 9 m3 with an average water residence time of about 2 h. A tidal regime resembling that in the fjord was maintained in the basins, and waves were generated regularly. NH4NO3 and H3PO4, at a constant molar NP ratio of 16:1, was added into 6 basins at concentrations 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 μM DIN above the background DIN concentration during 1 1/2 years. Two mesocosms were kept as control treatment. Marine communities were introduced into the basins two years prior to the start of nutrient dosage. The effects of nutrient enrichment were few and only marginal during the first year of nutrient addition, while some effects became more obvious during the second year. The growth rate of the periphyton and fast-growing macroalgae communities was stimulated by nutrient enrichment, while the response was less evident among the perennial fucoids. The structure of the macroalgal communities, however, did not change during 16 months' measurements. In contrast, growth on artificial rock substrates during the same period of time revealed intensive growth of the fast-growing Ulva lactuca in high-dosed basins compared with low-dosed and control basins, which were dominated by the fucoid Fucus serratus. The fauna communities exhibited only a minor response to nutrient treatment. The common periwinkle Littorina littorea, however, appeared with increased abundance in the high-dosed basins. The total system metabolism tended to increase slightly, but not significantly, with increased nutrient loading.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2016-11-09
    Description: A total of 386 Macrourus whitsoni from Antarctic waters were examined for ecto- and endoparasites. Sixty-five M. whitsoni collected near Halley Bay (Weddell Sea) and 321 specimens from the continental slope off King George Island (South Shetland Islands) were studied for sphyriid copepods directly after being caught. A subsample of 25 specimens from the Weddell Sea and of 9 specimens from King George Island were studied for the presence of other metazoan parasites. Twenty-two species were found, including one myxozoan, six digeneans, one monogenean, three cestodes, seven nematodes, one acanthocephalan and three crustacean species/taxa. While Auerbachia monstrosa and Capillaria sp. are reported for the first time from around the Antarctic, the other parasites have been recorded earlier in the Southern Ocean. Many parasite species found have a wide zoogeographical range and a low host-specificity. The parasite fauna of M. whitsoni revealed several similarities with its congeners M. carinatus and M. holotrachys from Antarctic and sub-Antarctic waters. This can be explained by a wide host range of many macrourid deep-sea parasites, together with an overlap in distribution patterns of their hosts. Other supporting factors are host migration and a close phylogenetic relationship between the hosts, which enable the parasites to infest all three macrourids. Eight new host and 14 new locality records are established.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2017-12-05
    Description: Although they can provide valuable information on at-sea ecology, data-loggers may adversely affect energetics, diving performance, and breeding success of equipped birds. With the aim of determining the effects of leg-attached data-loggers on the activity budgets of Humboldt penguins (Spheniscus humboldti) while on land, we equipped birds kept at the Landau Zoo, Landau, Germany, with such devices. We followed them during sample periods and recorded the occurrence and length of behaviors. Birds quickly habituated to the devices within 1 day of deployment, and mean rates of device-pecking were low (0.7–1.7 pecks/hr), with device-induced behaviors accounting for 〈1% of the mean daily activity budget. The method of device attachment appears behaviorally less stressful than the traditional tape-based system in which devices are normally attached to the penguin's back. By facilitating the testing of newly developed data-loggers on captive birds, or the development of methods for device attachment, zoos and aquaria may strengthen their role in animal conservation by helping research on free-ranging animals.
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  • 44
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 201 . pp. 639-647.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: The Hf isotope composition of seawater does not match that expected from dissolution of bulk continental crust. This mismatch is generally considered to be due to retention of unradiogenic Hf in resistant zircons during incomplete weathering of continental crust. During periods of intense glacial weathering, zircons should break down more efficiently, resulting in the release of highly unradiogenic Hf to the oceans. We test this hypothesis by comparing Nd and Hf isotope time series obtained from NW Atlantic ferromanganese crusts. Both isotope systems show a decrease associated with the onset of northern hemisphere glaciation. The observed changes display distinct trajectories in ϵNd–ϵHf space, which differ from previously reported arrays of bulk terrestrial material and seawater. Such patterns are consistent with the release of highly unradiogenic Hf from very old zircons, facilitated by enhanced mechanical weathering
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2020-03-24
    Description: A method for the continuous underway determination of Fe(II) in polar waters is reported. Surface seawater is pumped into a shipboard clean room container using a towed fish with Teflon diaphragm pump. Fe(II) was determined by flow injection analysis using a modified FeLume. The seawater is filtered in-line and the sample containing Fe(II) is mixed with luminol (buffered to pH 10) inside a flow cell and the resulting luminescence signal measured by a Hamamatsu HC-135 photon counter linked to a laptop computer. No preconcentration of the samples was applied, to reduce possible interferences and increase the sampling frequency. The system was utilised during EISENEX, a meso-scale iron enrichment experiment sample in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. In EISENEX, when surveying the iron enriched patch, a sample was analysed every 110 s (60 s loading time and 50 s for analysis). The detection limit, as determined by analysis of seawater (maintained at 4 °C to minimise oxidation) spiked with known concentrations of Fe(II), ranged from 25 to 133 pM. The system was also applied to vertical profiles of Fe(II) during EISENEX.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2017-07-26
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: North Atlantic synoptic-scale processes are analyzed by bandpassing 6-hourly NCEP–NCAR reanalysis data (1958–98) for several synoptic ranges corresponding to ultrahigh-frequency variability (0.5–2 days), synoptic-scale variability (2–6 days), slow synoptic processes (6–12 days), and low-frequency variability (12–30 days). Climatological patterns of the intensity of synoptic processes are not collocated for different ranges of variability, especially in the lower troposphere. Intensities of synoptic processes demonstrate opposite trends between the North American coast and in the northeast Atlantic. Although north of 40°N the intensity of ultrahigh-frequency variability and synoptic-scale processes show similar interannual variability, further analysis indicates that secular changes, and decadal-scale and interannual variability in the intensities of synoptic processes may not be necessarily consistent for different synoptic timescales. Magnitudes of winter ultrahigh-frequency variability are highly correlated with the intensity of synoptic-scale processes in the 1960s and early 1970s. However, they show little agreement with each other during the last two decades, pointing to the remarkable change in atmospheric variability over the North Atlantic in late 1970s. North Atlantic ultrahigh-frequency variability in winter is highly correlated with surface temperature gradient anomalies in the Atlantic–American sector. These gradients are computed from the merged fields of SST and surface temperature over the continent. They demonstrate a dipolelike pattern associated with the North American coast on one hand, with the subpolar SST front and continental Canada on the other. High-frequency variability and its synoptic counterpart demonstrate different relationships with the North Atlantic Oscillation. Reliability of these results and their sensitivity to the filtering procedures are addressed by comparison to radiosonde data and application of alternative filters.
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  • 48
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Verhandlungen der Internationalen Vereinigung für Theoretische und Angewandte Limnologie (28). pp. 352-354.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-26
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2017-06-26
    Description: Seismic reflection observations from the IMERSE cruise have confirmed the presence of at least two localised thick evaporite basins on the crest and Inner Plateau of the Mediterranean Ridge accretionary complex. The discovery is supported by interval velocity results from both near-normal incidence reflection data and wide-angle seismic data. These evaporite basins are located north of a deep trough known as the Cleft and at a currently active thrust zone south of the Cleft, on the crest of the Mediterranean Ridge. The polarity of the seismic reflections associated with the base of the evaporite shows a phase reversal relative to the seafloor. This high amplitude phase reversed reflection indicates a decrease in velocity between the evaporite and the underlying sediment. The existence of these thick evaporite deposits suggests that the distribution of Messinian salt is much thicker (∼1.8–2 km) on parts of the Ridge crest than initially perceived by previous investigations. We propose that these thick evaporite deposits were deposited in localised basins on the Ridge, formed in response to pre- and syn-Messinian tectonics. The evaporites on the Inner Plateau basin most likely represent the infill of a Messinian forearc basin. The existence of local deep evaporite basins on the crest of the Ridge at depths of 2.7–3.3 km below sea level at the present day supports the hypothesis that the Mediterranean Sea level must have dropped by around 3 km below its present sea level during the Messinian salinity crisis.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2018-06-07
    Description: A new mandibular sensor is presented here based on the use of a Hall sensor, attached to one mandible, opposite a magnet, attached to the other mandible. Changes in sensor voltage, proportional to magnetic field strength, and thus inter-mandibular angle, are recorded in a logger. This system was tested on seven captive Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) and three gentoo penguins (Pygoscelis papua) during: (1) feeding trials on land, where birds were given known quantities and types of food; and (2) trials in water where birds were allowed to swim and dive freely. In addition, six free-living Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus) were equipped with the system for single foraging trips. Angular signatures were looked for in instances when both captive and free-living birds might open their beaks, and it was discovered that five major behaviours could be identified: ingestion, breathing, calling, head shaking and preening. Captive feeding trials showed that prey mass could be determined with reasonable accuracy (r 2=0.92), and there was some indication that prey type could be resolved if recording frequency were high enough. Vocalisations in Adélie penguins (arc calls) took 〈0.7 s for mean maximum beak angles of 4.2° (SD 1.3), and were distinguished by their relatively gradual change in beak angle and by their high degree of symmetry. Beak shakings were distinguishable by their short duration (multiple peaks of 〈0.5 s) and minimal maximum angle (〈0.5°). Preening behaviour was apparent due to multiple decreasing peaks (angles 〈8°). Breathing could be subdivided into that during porpoising, where a characteristic double peak in beak angle was recorded, and that during normal surface rests between dives. During porpoising, only the primary peak (mean maximum beak angle 25.1°, SD 4.7) occurred when the bird was out of the water (mean maximum for second peak 5.9°, SD 4.1). During normal surface rests in free-living birds, breaths could be distinguished as a series of beak openings and closures, showing variation in amplitude and frequency according to an apparent recovery from the previous dive and preparation for the subsequent dive to come. The mandibular measuring system presented shows considerable promise for elucidating many hitherto intractable aspects of the behaviour of free-living animals.
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  • 51
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    British Ecological Society
    In:  Functional Ecology, 16 . pp. 141-148.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-25
    Description: 1. The published literature on the effects of flipper-bands on penguin ecology is reviewed. Six published studies show the following. 2. In Adélie Penguins Pygoscelis adeliae, flipper-bands directly damaged flippers, increased swimming costs by 24%, decreased survival in the first year after banding by 28%, and may have accelerated decline of a dwindling colony by 3%. 3. Adult return rates to colonies among flipper-banded Adélie, Chinstrap P. antarctica and Gentoo P. papua Penguins decreased by 8%, 12% and 25%, respectively, between singleand double-banded penguins. Juvenile return rates among Gentoo Penguins were reduced by 10·5%. Return rates to the colony among double-banded King Penguins Aptenodytes patagonicus were 31·3% and 6·7% lower than among single-banded birds in the first and second years after banding, respectively, and single flipper-banded birds showed annual survival rates 21·1% lower than those of birds fitted with subcutaneous transponders. 4. Among Royal Penguins Eudyptes schlegeli, there were no differences between chick growth, adult over-winter survival and fledging success between flipper-banded birds and birds fitted with transponders. 5. Adélie Penguin adult annual survival rates were lower among flipper-banded birds than among unbanded birds. 6. On the basis of dive profiles for Adélie Penguins, it is estimated that increased swimming costs of 5% reduce prey contact time by 10%, and of 24% reduce prey contact time by 48%. These estimated ‘knock-on’ or cumulative costs coupled with the survival and breeding costs shown by the majority of published field studies suggest that data collected on some flipper-banded populations are biased. 7. The advantages and disadvantages of an alternative long-term marking technique, subcutaneously implanted passively interrogated transponder tags, are discussed. Research projects currently testing transponders and flipper-bands worldwide are listed.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: We present comprehensive radiogenic isotope (Os, Pb, Hf, Nd, Sr) and trace element data on basaltic lavas from Pitcairn Island and the Pitcairn seamounts and examine the origin of the enriched mantle isotopic signature (EM-1) found in these lavas. The 187Os/188Os ratios of the lavas range from 0.131 to 0.254, while those of the high-Os concentration samples (〉50 pg/g) lie between 0.131 and 0.148. All 187Os/188Os ratios are higher than the bulk silicate Earth reference value of 0.127. Since ancient subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) is expected to have a 187Os/188Os ratio less than 0.127, it appears that recycled SCLM plays no role in the Pitcairn source. Variations in 187Os/188Os ratios appear to be unconnected with those of 206Pb/204Pb ratios in Pitcairn lavas, suggesting that Pb and Os isotopic variations are controlled by different factors. Modeling shows that variations in Pb isotopic compositions may mainly reflect the proportion of recycled sediment in the source, while those of 187Os/188Os ratios may reflect the proportion of peridotite mantle versus recycled oceanic crust. The occurrence of negative Nb anomalies in some of the lavas, a correlation between Nb anomaly and 87Sr/86Sr ratios (0.7036–0.7051), and extremely unradiogenic and strongly correlated Nd and Hf isotopic compositions (ϵNd of −5.9 to +1.1 and ϵHf of −5.3 to +2.2) together suggest that the Pitcairn mantle source contains a recycled continental crustal component. The slope of the ϵHf vs. ϵNd correlation is shallower for Pitcairn Island than for the Pitcairn seamounts or the global OIB array, and may be due to a variable ratio of recycled mud to sand in the Pitcairn source. A trace element mixing model also indicates the presence of small amounts of recycled pelagic and terrigenous sediment and permits variable amounts of depleted components such as recycled MORB, gabbro and depleted mantle. The 206Pb/204Pb ratios of the Pitcairn lavas vary between 17.47 and 18.10 and are very unradiogenic compared to those of other ocean island basalts. By contrast, 208Pb/204Pb ratios are high and relatively homogeneous at values of ∼39.0. This observation along with the measured Th/U ratios of the lavas, which range up to 14.1, indicate a long-term history of U loss in the Pitcairn source. In 207Pb/204Pb–206Pb/204Pb space, the data form a linear array that can be interpreted in terms of mixing between a minor recycled sediment end member and more depleted material. Lead isotopic compositions suitable for the recycled end member were investigated using a three-stage evolution model by Monte Carlo methods and suggest ages between 0.7 and 1.9 Ga for the recycled sediment. The relationships between measured Th/U and radiogenic 208Pb*/206Pb* ratios suggest that the isotopic arrays displayed by the lavas were produced by mixing, probably occurring during magma genesis.
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  • 53
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    Sociedad de Biología de Chile / BMC
    In:  Revista Chilena De Historia Natural (75). pp. 423-431.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-06
    Description: We analyzed a collection of 738 bird bones, representing a minimum of 71 individuals, found in a settlement of hunter-gatherers from the mid-Holocene, 5,000 years BP, in the coastal locality of Chan Chan, southern Chile. The camp was inhabited for over ca. 500 years, during which time a steady hunting pressure on the local marine resources was exerted, particularly on seabirds. The most abundant taxon (bones/number of individuals) was the red-legged cormorant Phalacrocorax gaimardi (551/44) which was also the prey which provided the highest edible proportion of body mass. Albatrosses Thalassarche cf. melanophris (103/12) and shearwaters Puffinus cf. griseus (20/5) were secondary prey. Cormorants were presumably hunted at their breeding colonies (which are still present in the area) so it is probable that egging also occurred. Because they are pelagic, albatrosses could have been hunted at sea, but the adequate technology for this (boats, hooks) is not apparent in the archaeological record. The bird assemblage obtained in the sample does not qualitatively differ from that of the present, indicating a reasonable stability in species richness from the considered period until the present. The high diversity of coastal resources in Chan Chan was likely important in leading to the, at least seasonal, occupation of these areas by hunter-gatherers and also may have encouraged the development of the adequate technology for the exploitation of these resources.
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  • 54
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    Schweizerbartsche Verlagsbuchhandlung
    In:  In: Goethe und die Naturwissenschaften. , ed. by Steininger, F. and Kossartz, A. Schweizerbartsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart, Germany, pp. 119-176.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-08
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  • 55
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    Unknown
    In:  (Diploma thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany, 41 pp
    Publication Date: 2021-09-10
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 56
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    OSA (Optical Society of America)
    In:  Applied Optics, 41 (33). pp. 7058-7067.
    Publication Date: 2019-10-17
    Description: The performance of the OC2 Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) algorithm based on 490- and 555-nm water-leaving radiances at low chlorophyll contents is compared with those of semianalytical models and a Monte Carlo radiative transfer model. We introduce our model, which uses two particle phase functions and scattering coefficient parameterizations to achieve a backscattering ratio that varies with chlorophyll concentration. We discuss the various parameterizations and compare them with existent measurements. The SeaWiFS algorithm could be confirmed within an accuracy of 35% over a chlorophyll range from 0.1 to 1 mg m−3, whereas for lower chlorophyll concentrations we found a significant overestimation of the OC2 algorithm.
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  • 57
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    Springer
    In:  International Journal of Earth Sciences, 91 (4). pp. 559-561.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
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  • 58
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: The Timing and Location of Major Ore Deposits in an Evolving Orogen. , ed. by Blundell, D. J., Neubauer, F. and von Quadt, A. Geological Society Special Publications, 204 . Geological Society, London, pp. 119-135. ISBN 1-86239-122-X
    Publication Date: 2018-01-09
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2018-06-07
    Description: Long-term dynamics (1960–1997) of the cladoceran species Bosmina coregoni maritima, Evadne nordmanni and Podon spp. are described for the Gdansk Deep and the Gotland Basin (Central Baltic Sea). By using correlation analyses on seasonal time-series, the influence of temperature and salinity on the abundance of cladoceran species was investigated. A clear affinity to higher temperature was found for B. coregoni maritima in summer as well as for E. nordmanni and Podon spp. in spring. In addition to temperature, association tests with salinity revealed besides species-specific preferences, regional and temporal differences. Contrary to B. coregoni maritima, both other species were positively associated to salinity in summer and autumn in the Gdansk Deep. In the Gotland Basin only E. nordmanni was positively correlated to salinity in autumn. Differences in the response to hydrographic variables are possibly stage specific, i.e. between resting eggs and adults, or due to a different adaptation to the abiotic environment.
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  • 60
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    University of Miami - Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
    In:  Bulletin of Marine Science, 71 . p. 1114.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-21
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: A combined volcanological, geochemical, paleo-oceanological, geochronological and geophysical study was undertaken on the Kurile Basin, in order to constrain the origin and evolution of this basin. Very high rates of subsidence were determined for the northeastern floor and margin of the Kurile Basin. Dredged volcanic samples from the Geophysicist Seamount, which were formed under subaerial or shallow water conditions but are presently located at depths in excess of 2300 m, were dated at 0.84±0.06 and 1.07±0.04 Ma with the laser 40Ar/39Ar single crystal method, yielding a minimum average subsidence rate of 1.6 mm/year for the northeast basin floor in the Quaternary. Trace element and Sr–Nd–Pb isotope data from the volcanic rocks show evidence for contamination within lower continental crust and/or the subcontinental lithospheric mantle, indicating that the basement presently at ∼6-km depth is likely to represent thinned continental crust. Average subsidence rates of 0.5–2.0 mm/year were estimated for the northeastern slope of the Kurile Basin during the Pliocene and Quaternary through the determination of the age and paleo-environment (depth) of formation of sediments from a canyon wall. Taken together, the data from the northeastern part of the Kurile Basin indicate that subsidence began in or prior to the Early Pliocene and that subsidence rates have increased in the Quaternary. Similar rates of subsidence have been obtained from published studies on the Sakhalin Shelf and Slope and from volcanoes in the rear of the Kurile Arc. The recent stress field of the Kurile Basin is inferred from the analysis of seismic activity, focal mechanism solutions and from the structure of the sedimentary cover and of the Alaid back-arc volcano. Integration of these results suggests that compression is responsible for the rapid subsidence of the Kurile Basin and that subsidence may be an important step in the transition from basin formation to its destruction. The compression of the Kurile Basin results from squeezing of the Okhotsk Plate between four major plates: the Pacific, North American, Eurasian and Amur. We predict that continued compression could lead to subduction of the Kurile Basin floor beneath Hokkaido and the Kurile Arc in the future and thus to basin closure.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2017-01-18
    Description: The intensity of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) production has been one of the most important parameters controlling the global thermohaline ocean circulation system and climate. Here we present a new approach to reconstruct the overall strength of NADW export from the North Atlantic to the Southern Ocean over the past 14 Myr applying the deep water Nd and Pb isotope composition as recorded by ferromanganese crusts and nodules. We present the first long-term Nd and Pb isotope time series for deep Southern Ocean water masses, which are compared with previously published time series for NADW from the NW Atlantic Ocean. These data suggest a continuous and strong export of NADW, or a precursor of it, into the Southern Ocean between 14 and 3 Ma. An increasing difference in Nd and Pb isotope compositions between the NW Atlantic and the Southern Ocean over the past 3 Myr gives evidence for a progressive overall reduction of NADW export since the onset of Northern Hemisphere glaciation (NHG). The Nd isotope data allow us to assess at least semiquantitatively that the amount of this reduction has been in the range between 14 and 37% depending on location.
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  • 63
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    Elsevier
    In:  In: Science technology synergy for research in the marine environment: challanges for the XXI century. , ed. by Beranzoli, L., Favali, P. and Smriglio, G. Developments in marine technology, 12 . Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands, pp. 37-44. ISBN 0-444-50591-1
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Marine seismic wide-angle data acquisition and earthquake seismology observations are at the verge of a quantum leap in data quality and density. Advances in micro-electronic technology facilitates the construction of instrumcnts that enable large data volumes to be collected and that are small and cheap enough so that large numbers can be built and operated economically. The main improvements are a dramatic decrease of power consumption ( 〈 250 m W) and increase in clock stability ( 〈 0.05 ppm}. Several scenarios for future experiments arc discussed in this contrihution
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  • 64
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    Elsevier
    In:  Global and Planetary Change, 33 . pp. 15-28.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-24
    Description: A combination of weight and reflectance measurements as well as scanning electron microscope (SEM) analyses on planktic foraminiferal tests from two sites in the Nordic Seas were used to investigate the pelagic carbonate preservation during the last five glacial–interglacial cycles. In general, a pattern showing good preservation during glacial times and enhanced corrosion during interglacial times can be observed. Marine Isotope Stage 11 (MIS 11) reveals the strongest corrosional features with an estimated 45% total loss of the foraminiferal carbonate before shell fragmentation. One reason for the enhanced interglacial corrosion may be a high regional surface productivity during these intervals, which led to increased dissolution rates in the deep sea driven by metabolic carbon dioxide. However, the carbonate preservation changes may also be linked to global changes in the marine carbonate system. Although the reason for the observed dissolution pattern in the Nordic Seas remains speculative, it seems to be in phase with the rhythm of glacial–interglacial carbonate preservation in the Pacific Ocean but out of phase with the rest of the Atlantic. The data further support the hypothesis that much of the glacial decrease in the atmospheric CO2 may be attributed to the changes in the alkalinity of the oceans.
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  • 65
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 107 (C1). 10.1029-10.1040.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-18
    Description: Three deep anticyclonic eddies of a species only reported once before [ Gordon and Greengrove, 1986 ] were intersected by hydrographic lines of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) and South Atlantic Ventilation Experiment (SAVE) programs in the Argentine Basin. The vortices are centered near 3500 m depth at the interface between North Atlantic Deep Water and Bottom Water. They have ∼1500-m-thick cores containing Lower Circumpolar Deep Water and a dynamic influence that may span up to two thirds of the water column. As one eddy was observed just downstream of the western termination of the Falkland Escarpment, a destabilization of the deep boundary current by the sudden slope relaxation is suggested as a potential cause of eddy formation. Besides isopycnal interleaving at the eddy perimeters, strongly eroded core properties in the upper parts of the lenses, associated with low density ratios, hint at double diffusion at the top of the structures as another major decay mechanism. The presence of an eddy in the northern Argentine Basin shows the possibility for a northward drift of the vortices, in this basin at least. Deep events in recent current measurements from the Vema Channel are presented that raise the question of further equatorward motion to the Brazil Basin.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Measurement strategies for understanding the oceanic CO2 (carbon dioxide) system are moving towards in situ and ship of opportunity sampling techniques. Automated instrumentation with high accuracy and sampling frequencies will enable a greater understanding of the fluxes of marine carbon and lead to a more reliable constrain on the calculated uptake of anthropogenic CO2 by the oceans. This paper describes the automated marine pH sensor (AMpS); new instrumentation and methodology for the determination of seawater pH using dual spectrophotometric measurements of sulfonephthalein indicator in a semi-continuous seawater stream. The pH values measured during a recent study in the Weddell Sea are used to illustrate the excellent properties of the AMpS. The method has an on-line precision of better than 0.001 pH units and an estimated accuracy of better than 0.004 pH units. The instrument is compact, portable and has a measurement frequency of 20 samples per hour. The instrument is ideally suitable for operation on ships of opportunity.
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  • 67
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 32 (2). pp. 401-410.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Turbulent fluxes of momentum and sensible heat were estimated from sonic anemometer measurements gathered over the Labrador Sea during a winter cruise of the R/V Knorr. The inertial dissipation method was used to calculate turbulent fluxes of momentum. The resulting drag coefficients agree well with earlier findings. Sensible heat fluxes were computed using both cross-correlation and inertial dissipation techniques. There is good agreement between results from both methods, although there is more scatter in the correlation fluxes than the dissipation fluxes. The inertial dissipation method gives reasonable results even under conditions of high wind speeds and low air temperatures, which combined with the relatively warm sea surface temperatures lead to sensible heat fluxes of several hundred watts per square meter. Sensible heat fluxes obtained from the sonic anemometer measurements agree well with bulk turbulent fluxes according to the formulation of Isemer and Hasse.
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  • 68
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 16 (3). p. 1081.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-15
    Description: Methane in surface waters and marine air off Oregon (44°24′N–44°54′N, 124°36′W–125°24′W) was continuously surveyed in July 1999. During a high-resolution survey after a period of steady winds from the north, CH4 concentrations were high in the northeastern region, near the shelf edge. The highest CH4 concentrations were 2.5 times higher than equilibrium with the atmospheric partial pressure. In contrast, concentrations were near equilibrium in the western part of the survey area, the Hydrate Ridge. The increase in CH4 from southwest to northeast correlates with a drop in sea surface temperature (SST), from 16.5°C to 〈13.5°C, toward the shelf edge. The observed SST pattern was caused by summer upwelling off Oregon. The results suggest that CH4 derived from bottom sources near the shelf/slope break and methane found in connection with shallow (100–300 m) turbidity layers is transported to the surface by coastal upwelling, which causes an enhanced net flux of CH4 to the atmosphere. Vertical profiles of the methane distribution on the shelf in October demonstrate the accumulation of methane introduced by shelf sources. Surface concentrations at these stations in October (during nonupwelling conditions) were lower than in July (during upwelling) and were only slightly oversaturated with respect to the atmosphere. An acoustic Doppler current profiler survey indicates that the observed trend cannot be attributed to a surface flow reversal in the area. The low-salinity waters in the core of the Columbia River plume (S 〈 31) showed no enhanced CH4 concentrations. The trend of higher CH4 concentrations at lower temperatures existed over the whole 17-day survey, but large spatial and temporal variations existed. The presence of methane sources in regions of coastal upwelling worldwide, such as shallow seeps, gas hydrates, and intermediate nepheloid layers, suggests that the enhancement of CH4 fluxes to the atmosphere by coastal upwelling occurs on a global scale.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2017-02-10
    Description: Deep marine currents are strongly influenced by climatic changes. They also deposit, rework, and sort sediment, and can generate kilometer-scale sedimentary bodies (drifts). These drifts are made of thoroughly bioturbated, stacked sedimentary sequences called contourites [Gonthier et al., 1984]. As a consequence, change in the direction or intensity of currents can be recorded in the sediments
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2017-01-30
    Description: Wandering Albatrosses Diomedea exulans are frequently killed when they attempt to scavenge baited hooks deployed by long-line fishing vessels. We studied the foraging ecology of Wandering Albatrosses breeding on Marion Island in order to assess the scale of interactions with known long-line fishing fleets. During incubation and late chick-rearing, birds foraged further away from the island, in warmer waters, and showed high spatial overlap with areas of intense tuna Thunnus spp. long-line fishing. During early chick-rearing, birds made shorter foraging trips and showed higher spatial overlap with the local Patagonian Toothfish Dissostichus eleginoides long-line fishery. Tracks of birds returning with offal from the Toothfish fishery showed a strong association with positions at which Toothfish long-lines were set and most diet samples taken during this stage contained fishery-related items. Independent of these seasonal differences, females foraged further from the islands and in warmer waters than males. Consequently, female distribution overlapped more with tuna long-line fisheries, whereas males interacted more with the Toothfish long-line fishery. These factors could lead to differences in the survival probabilities of males and females. Non-breeding birds foraged in warmer waters and showed the highest spatial overlap with tuna long-line fishing areas. The foraging distribution of Marion Island birds showed most spatial overlap with birds from the neighbouring Crozet Islands during the late chick-rearing and non-breeding periods. These areas of foraging overlap also coincided with areas of intense tuna long-line fishing south of Africa. As the population trends of Wandering Albatrosses at these two localities are very similar, it is possible that incidental mortality during the periods when these two populations show the highest spatial overlap could be driving these trends.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2017-07-12
    Description: Variations in oxygen conditions below the permanent halocline influence the ecosystem of the Baltic Sea through a number of mechanisms. In this study, we examine the effects of physical forcing on variations in the volume of deep oxygenated water suitable for reproductive success of central Baltic cod. Recent research has identified the importance of inflows of saline and oxygenated North Sea water into the Baltic Sea for the recruitment of Baltic cod. However, other processes have been suggested to modify this reproduction volume including variations in timing and volume of terrestrial runoff, variability of the solubility of oxygen due to variations in sea surface temperature as well as the influence of variations in wind stress. In order to examine the latter three mechanisms, we have performed simulations utilizing the Kiel Baltic Sea model for a period of a weak to moderate inflow of North Sea water into the Baltic, modifying wind stress, freshwater runoff and thermal inputs. The model is started from three-dimensional fields of temperature, salinity and oxygen obtained from a previous model run and forced by realistic atmospheric conditions. Results of this realistic reference run were compared to runs with modified meteorological forcing conditions and river runoff. From these simulations, it is apparent that processes other than major Baltic inflows have the potential to alter the reproduction volume of Baltic cod. Low near-surface air temperatures in the North Sea, the Skagerrak/Kattegat area and in the western Baltic influence the water mass properties (high oxygen solubility). Eastward oriented transports of these well-oxygenated highly saline water masses may have a significant positive impact on the Baltic cod reproduction volume in the Bornholm Basin. Finally, we analysed how large scale and local atmospheric forcing conditions are related to the identified major processes affecting the reproduction volume.
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  • 72
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    DWD
    In:  Promet - Meteorologische Fortbildung, 28 (1/2). pp. 64-70.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-04
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  • 73
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    Elsevier
    In:  In: Science Technology Synergy for Research in the Marine Environment: Challenges for the XXI Century. , ed. by Beranzoli, L., Favali, P. and Smirglio, G. Developments in marine technology, 12 . Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands, p. 2000. ISBN 0-7803-8669-8
    Publication Date: 2020-05-27
    Description: The paper presents an overview of recent seafloor long-term single-frame multiparameter platform developed in the framework of the European Commission and Italian projects starting from the GEOSTAR prototype. The main features of the different systems are described as well as the sea missions that led to their validation. The ORION seafloor observatory network recently developed, based on the GEOSTAR-type platforms and engaged in a deep-sea mission at 3300 m w.d. in the Mediterranean Sea, is also described
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2017-06-22
    Description: Very high-frequency marine multichannel seismic reflection data generated by small-volume air- or waterguns allow detailed, high-resolution studies of sedimentary structures of the order of one to few metres wavelength. The high-frequency content, however, requires (1) a very exact knowledge of the source and receiver positions, and (2) the development of data processing methods which take this exact geometry into account. Static corrections are crucial for the quality of very high-frequency stacked data because static shifts caused by variations of the source and streamer depths are of the order of half to one dominant wavelength, so that they can lead to destructive interference during stacking of CDP sorted traces. As common surface-consistent residual static correction methods developed for land seismic data require fixed shot and receiver locations two simple and fast techniques have been developed for marine seismic data with moving sources and receivers to correct such static shifts. The first method – called CDP static correction method – is based on a simultaneous recording of Parasound sediment echosounder and multichannel seismic reflection data. It compares the depth information derived from the first arrivals of both data sets to calculate static correction time shifts for each seismic channel relative to the Parasound water depths. The second method – called average static correction method – utilises the fact that the streamer depth is mainly controlled by bird units, which keep the streamer in a predefined depth at certain increments but do not prevent the streamer from being slightly buoyant in-between. In case of calm weather conditions these streamer bendings mainly contribute to the overall static time shifts, whereas depth variations of the source are negligible. Hence, mean static correction time shifts are calculated for each channel by averaging the depth values determined at each geophone group position for several subsequent shots. Application of both methods to data of a high-resolution seismic survey of channel-levee systems on the Bengal Fan shows that the quality of the stacked section can be improved significantly compared to stacking results achieved without preceding static corrections. The optimised records show sedimentary features in great detail, that are not visible without static corrections. Limitations only result from the sea floor topography. The CDP static correction method generally provides more coherent reflections than the average static correction method but can only be applied in areas with rather flat sea floor, where no diffraction hyperbolae occur. In contrast, the average static correction method can also be used in regions with rough morphology, but the coherency of reflections is slightly reduced compared to the results of the CDP static correction method.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2017-07-27
    Description: Ten ODP sites drilled in a depth transect (2164–4775 m water depth) during Leg 172 recovered high-deposition rate (〉20 cm/kyr) sedimentary sections from sediment drifts in the western North Atlantic. For each site an age model covering the past 0.8–0.9 Ma has been developed. The time scales have a resolution of 10–20 kyr and are derived by tuning variations of estimated carbonate content to the orbital parameters precession and obliquity. Based on the similarity in the signature of proxy records and the spectral character of the time series, the sites are divided into two groups: precession cycles are better developed in carbonate records from a group of shallow sites (2164–2975 m water depth, Sites 1055–1058) while the deeper sites (2995–4775 m water depth, Sites 1060–1063) are characterized by higher spectral density in the obliquity band. The resulting time scales show excellent coherence with other dated carbonate and isotope records from low latitudes. Besides the typical Milankovitch cyclicity significant variance of the resulting carbonate time series is concentrated at millennial-scale changes with periods of about 12, 6, 4, 2.5, and 1.5 kyr. Comparisons of carbonate records from the Blake Bahama Outer Ridge and the Bermuda Rise reveal a remarkable similarity in the time and frequency domain indicating a basin-wide uniform sedimentation pattern during the last 0.9 Ma.
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  • 76
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    Springer
    In:  In: Sustainable Increase of Marine Harvesting: Fundamental Mechanisms and New Concepts: Proceedings of the 1 st Maricult Conference held in Trondheim, Norway, 25-28 June 2000. , ed. by Vadstein, O. and Olsen, Y. Developments in Hydrobiology, 167 . Springer, Berlin, Germany, pp. 11-20. ISBN 978-90-481-6217-8
    Publication Date: 2017-01-30
    Description: Based on existing knowledge about phytoplankton responses to nutrients and food size spectra of herbivorous zooplankton, three different configurations of pelagic food webs are proposed for three different types of marine nutrient regimes: (1) upwelling systems, (2) oligotrophic oceanic systems, (3) eutrophicated coastal systems. Up-welling systems are characterised by high levels of plant nutrients and high ratios of Si to N and R. Phytoplankton consists mainly of diatoms together with a subdominant contribution of flagellates. Most phytoplankton falls into the food spectrum of herbivorous, crustacean zooplankton. Therefore, herbivorous crustaceans occupy trophic level 2 and zooplanktivorous fish occupy trophic level 3. Phytoplankton in oligotrophic, oceanic systems is dominated by picoplankton, which are too small to be ingested by copepods. Most primary production is channelled through the ‘microbial loop’ (picoplankton — heterotrophic nanoflagellates — ciliates). Sporadically, pelagic tunicates also consume a substantial proportion of primary production. Herbivorous crustaceans feed on heterotrophic nanoflagellates and ciliates, thus occupying a food chain position between 3 and 4, which leads to a food chain position between 4 and 5 for zooplanktivorous fish. By cultural eutrophication, N and P availability are elevated while Si remains unaffected or even declines. Diatoms decrease in relative importance while summer blooms of inedible algae (Phaeocystis, toxic dinoflagellates, toxic prymnesiophyceae, etc.) prevail. The spring bloom may still contain a substantial contribution of diatoms. The production of the inedible algae enters the pelagic energy flow via the detritus food chain: DOC release by cell lysis — bacteria — heterotrophic nanoflagellates — ciliates. Accordingly, crustacean zooplankton occupy food chain position 4 to 5 during the non-diatom seasons. Ecological efficiency considerations lead to the conclusion that fish production:primary production ratios should be highest in upwelling systems and substantially lower in oligotrophic and in culturally eutrophicated systems. Further losses of fish production may occur when carnivorous, gelatinous zooplankton (jellyfish) replace fish.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2016-06-03
    Description: Extensive deposits of methane hydrate characterize Hydrate Ridge in the Cascadia margin accretionary complex. The ridge has a northern peak at a depth of about 600 m, which is covered by extensive carbonate deposits, and an 800 m deep southern peak that is predominantly sediment covered. Samples collected with benthic instrumentation and from Alvin push cores reveal a complex hydrogeologic system where fluid and methane fluxes from the seafloor vary by several orders of magnitude at sites separated by distances of only a few meters. We identified three distinct active fluid regimes at Hydrate Ridge. The first province is represented by discrete sites of methane gas ebullition, where the bulk of the flow occurs through channels in which gas velocities reach 1 m s−1. At the northern summit of the ridge the gas discharge appears to be driven by pressure changes on a deep gas reservoir, and it is released episodically at a rate of ∼6×104 mol day−1 following tidal periodicity. Qualitative observations at the southern peak suggest that the gas discharge there is driven by more localized phenomena, possibly associated with destabilization of massive gas hydrate deposits at the seafloor. The second province is characterized by the presence of extensive bacterial mats that overlay sediments capped with methane hydrate crusts, both at the northern and southern summits. Here fluid typically flows out of the sediments at rates ranging from 30 to 100 cm yr−1. The third province is represented by sites colonized by vesicomyid clams, where bottom seawater flows into the sediments for at least some fraction of the time. Away from the active gas release sites, fluid flows calculated from pore water models are in agreement with estimates using published flowmeter data and numerical model calculations. Methane fluxes out of mat-covered sites range from 30 to 90 mmol m−2 day−1, whereas at clam sites the methane flux is less than 1 mmol m−2 day−1.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2017-05-10
    Description: This paper presents data to support the presence of (1) intra-annual signals in the chemical composition (δ18O and Sr/Ca) of the skeletons of sclerosponges from the Bahamas and (2) variable rates of skeletal accretion. These conclusions are based on data obtained by using a microsampling method for the stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in which material was extracted at a resolution of one sample every 34 μm and a laser microprobe which obtained trace element data every 20 μm (Sr, Mg, and Pb). An age model was established using a combination of changes in the concentration of Pb, the change in the δ13C of the skeleton of the sclerosponges, and U/Th isotopic measurements. These methods yield a mean growth rate of 220 μm/yr but suggest that the growth rate in this particular sclerosponge was not constant. The calculated growth rate is within error identical to that determined by U/Th methods. The variable growth rate was confirmed through spectral analysis of the δ18O and Sr/Ca data that showed peaks corresponding to the annual cycle in these parameters as well as peaks corresponding to growth rates of approximately 128, 212, 270, and 400 μm/yr. The presence of these additional frequencies suggests a growth rate between approximately 100 and 300 μm/yr. These conclusions were supported by modeling of oxygen isotopic data measured on a scleractinian coral as well as model isotope data generated on synthetic time series. These findings have important implications for the use of sclerosponges as proxies of paleoclimate because they emphasize the need for a precise yearly chronology in order that proxy data can be compared with climatic variables.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2015-02-18
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 80
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    Institut für Meereskunde der Universität Hamburg
    In:  Technical Report, 2-03 . Institut für Meereskunde der Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, 38 pp.
    Publication Date: 2015-12-10
    Description: The cruise had two main objectives: ·to educate undergraduate students in the handling of oceanographic instrumentation and in the collection and analysis of field data, ·to map the cold overflow to the North Atlantic and the warm inflow to the Nordic Seas over the ridge system between Greenland and Scotland, through Denmark Strait, across the Iceland Faroe Ridge, through the Faroe-Bank Channel, and across the Wyville Thomson Ridge and to study its variability.
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  • 81
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    GEOMAR Forschungszentrum für marine Geowissenschaften
    In:  GEOMAR-Report, 102 . GEOMAR Forschungszentrum für marine Geowissenschaften, Kiel, 391 pp.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-28
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 82
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    Unknown
    In:  UNSPECIFIED, Kiel, 84 + Anhang pp.
    Publication Date: 2015-04-01
    Description: BMBF-Verbundvorhaben: 03G0534. Förderzeitraum 1.1.1998 bis 30.6.2001. Zusammenfassung der Ergebnisse Im Rahmen des Verbundvorhabens „Russisch-deutsche Zusammenarbeit: System Laptev-See 2000“ konnten sehr vielversprechende und z.T. einzigartige Ergebnisse erzielt werden. Die Voraussetzung dafür bildeten die wissenschaftlichen Arbeiten während der marinen und terrestrischen Expeditionen TRANSDRIFT und LENA. Durch den regen Austausch von Wissenschaftlern konnte die kooperative Auswertung sichergestellt werden. Ein Teil der wissenschaftlichen Auswertungen des Probenmaterials wurde bereits im 1999 eröffneten Otto-Schmidt-Labor für Polar- und Meeresforschung (Förderkennzeichen: 03PLO26A) in St. Petersburg durchgeführt. Die Ergebnisse wurden auf vielen internationalen Fachtagungen sowie während der bilateralen Arbeitstreffen und Statusseminare des Verbundvorhabens (1999 und 2000) in St. Petersburg vorgestellt und in internationalen Fachzeitschriften veröffentlicht. Die weitere Auswertung wissenschaftlich besonders relevanter Themenbereiche wird derzeit im Rahmen des Synthesevorhabens „System Laptev-See 2000 – Synthesephase“ (Förderkennzeichen: BEO 03G0569; Laufzeit 1.1.2001-31.8.2002) durchgeführt. Im Rahmen dieser Synthesephase wird auch die Abschlussbegutachtung des Verbundvorhabens stattfinden (8.-11. Mai 2002 in Kiel). Tabelle 1 zeigt die Struktur des Verbundvorhabens und seiner Teilprojekte. Im Anschluss daran folgt eine Übersicht der wichtigsten Ergebnisse der Teilprojekte des Verbundvorhabens. Teilprojekt 1: Bilanzierung von Treibhausgasen und Prozessstudien zum Methankreislauf in Permafrostgebieten Teilprojekt 2: Mikrobielle Lebensgemeinschaften und CO2-Fluss in Permafrostlandschaften Teilprojekt 3: Marine Umweltreaktionen und Stoffumsätze Teilprojekt 4: Atmosphärischer Eintrag von natürlichen Radioisotopen Teilprojekt 5: Sensibilität mariner arktischer Ökosysteme Teilprojekt 6: Umwelt- und Sedimentationsgeschichte des Lena-Deltas Teilprojekt 7: Partikeltransport im Delta-Schelf-System Teilprojekt 8: Terrestrische Klimasignale in eisreichen Permafrostabfolgen Teilprojekt 9: Ursachen und Auswirkungen von Umweltveränderungen in Permafrostgebieten Teilprojekt 10: Akustische Signale von submarinem Permafrost Teilprojekt TK: Terrestrische Koordination Teilprojekt MK: Marine Koordination
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  • 83
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    Selbstverl. der Alfred-Wegener-Stiftung
    In:  [Proceedings]
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Type: Proceedings , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 84
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    American Society for Microbiology
    In:  Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 68 (9). pp. 4431-4440.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-27
    Description: Sponges (class Porifera) are evolutionarily ancient metazoans that populate the tropical oceans in great abundances but also occur in temperate regions and even in freshwater. Sponges contain large numbers of bacteria that are embedded within the animal matrix. The phylogeny of these bacteria and the evolutionary age of the interaction are virtually unknown. In order to provide insights into the species richness of the microbial community of sponges, we performed a comprehensive diversity survey based on 190 sponge-derived 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences. The sponges Aplysina aerophoba and Theonella swinhoei were chosen for construction of the bacterial 16S rDNA library because they are taxonomically distantly related and they populate nonoverlapping geographic regions. In both sponges, a uniform microbial community was discovered whose phylogenetic signature is distinctly different from that of marine plankton or marine sediments. Altogether 14 monophyletic, sponge-specific sequence clusters were identified that belong to at least seven different bacterial divisions. By definition, the sequences of each cluster are more closely related to each other than to a sequence from nonsponge sources. These monophyletic clusters comprise 70% of all publicly available sponge-derived 16S rDNA sequences, reflecting the generality of the observed phenomenon. This shared microbial fraction represents the smallest common denominator of the sponges investigated in this study. Bacteria that are exclusively found in certain host species or that occur only transiently would have been missed. A picture emerges where sponges can be viewed as highly concentrated reservoirs of so far uncultured and elusive marine microorganisms.
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  • 85
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    Oxford University Press
    In:  FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 26 (2). pp. 149-162.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: Legionella pneumophila is naturally found in fresh water were the bacteria parasitize within protozoa. It also survives planctonically in water or biofilms. Upon aerosol formation via man-made water systems, L. pneumophila can enter the human lung and cause a severe form of pneumonia, called Legionnaires’ disease. The pathogenesis of Legionnaires’ disease is largely due to the ability of L. pneumophila to invade and grow within macrophages. An important characteristic of the intracellular survival strategy is the replication within the host vacuole that does not fuse with endosomes or lysosomes. In recent times a great number of bacterial virulence factors which affect growth of L. pneumophila in both macrophages and protozoa have been identified. The ongoing Legionella genome project and the use of genetically tractable surrogate hosts are expected to significantly contribute to the understanding of bacterium–host interactions and the regulation of virulence traits during the infection cycle. Since person-to-person transmission of legionellosis has never been observed, the measures for disease prevention have concentrated on eliminating the pathogen from water supplies. In this respect detection and analysis of Legionella in complex environmental consortia become increasingly important. With the availability of new molecular tools this area of applied research has gained new momentum.
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  • 86
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    American Society for Microbiology
    In:  In: Legionella. , ed. by Marre, R., Kwaik, Y. A. and Bartlett, C. Legionella : proceedings of the International Symposium on Legionella, 5 . American Society for Microbiology, Washington, USA, pp. 161-164. ISBN 1-555-81230-9
    Publication Date: 2016-06-28
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2015-09-07
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2015-12-02
    Description: Near the eastern end of the Tonale fault zone, a segment of the Periadriatic fault system in the Italian Alps, the Adamello intrusion produced a syn-kinematic contact aureole. A temperature gradient from ∼250 to ∼700 °C was determined across the Tonale fault zone using critical syn-kinematic mineral assemblages from the metasedimentary host rocks surrounding deformed quartz veins. Deformed quartz veins sampled along this temperature gradient display a transition from cataclasites to mylonites (frictional–viscous transition) at 280±30 °C. Within the mylonites, zones characterized by different dynamic recrystallization mechanisms were defined: Bulging recrystallization (BLG) was dominant between ∼280 and ∼400 °C, subgrain rotation recrystallization (SGR) in the ∼400–500 °C interval, and the transition to dominant grain boundary migration recrystallization (GBM) occurred at ∼500 °C. The microstructures associated with the three recrystallization mechanisms and the transitions between them can be correlated with experimentally derived dislocation creep regimes. Bulk texture X-ray goniometry and computer-automated analysis of preferred [c]-axis orientations of porphyroclasts and recrystallized grains are used to quantify textural differences that correspond to the observed microstructural changes. Within the BLG- and SGR zones, porphyroclasts show predominantly single [c]-axis maxima. At the transition from the SGR- to the GBM zone, the texture of recrystallized grains indicates a change from [c]-axis girdles, diagnostic of multiple slip systems, to a single maximum in Y. Within the GBM zone, above 630±30 °C, the textures also include submaxima, which are indicative of combined basal 〈a〉- and prism [c] slip.
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  • 89
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    Optical Society of America
    In:  Applied Optics, 41 (15). p. 2705.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-11
    Description: Semianalytical (SA) ocean color models have advantages over conventional band ratio algorithms in that multiple ocean properties can be retrieved simultaneously from a single water-leaving radiance spectrum. However, the complexity of SA models has stalled their development, and operational implementation as optimal SA parameter values are hard to determine because of limitations in development data sets and the lack of robust tuning procedures. We present a procedure for optimizing SA ocean color models for global applications. The SA model to be optimized retrieves simultaneous estimates for chlorophyll (Chl) concentration, the absorption coefficient for dissolved and detrital materials [a cdm(443)], and the particulate backscatter coefficient [b bp(443)] from measurements of the normalized water-leaving radiance spectrum. Parameters for the model are tuned by simulated annealing as the global optimization protocol. We first evaluate the robustness of the tuning method using synthetic data sets, and we then apply the tuning procedure to an in situ data set. With the tuned SA parameters, the accuracy of retrievals found with the globally optimized model (the Garver-Siegel-Maritorena model version 1; hereafter GSM01) is excellent and results are comparable with the current Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view sensor (SeaWiFS) algorithm for Chl. The advantage of the GSM01 model is that simultaneous retrievals of a cdm(443) and b bp(443) are made that greatly extend the nature of global applications that can be explored. Current limitations and further developments of the model are discussed.
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  • 90
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    Blackwell Science
    In:  In: Flood and Megaflood Processes and Deposits: Recent and Ancient Examples. Special Publication of the International Association of Sedimentologists, 32 . Blackwell Science, Oxford, UK, pp. 55-65.
    Publication Date: 2016-02-12
    Description: On 30 September 1996, seismological evidence indicated that a volcanic eruption was starting north of the Grímsvötn caldera in the glacier Vatnajökull, Iceland. As the eruption developed during the first half of October, meltwater was collected in the subglacial lake2 Grímsvötn at a tremendous rate. It was obvious that a catastrophic jökulhlaup could be expected on the outwash plain Skeiðarársandur south of the glacier Skeiðarárjökull, endangering travellers, as well as bridges and roads in the area. This paper describes the events, hydrograph and suspended sediment transport for the catastrophic flood on Skeiðarársandur, following the subglacial eruption.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2015-02-20
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  • 92
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    AWI
    In:  In: Russian–German cooperation System Laptev Sea 2000: The expedition Lena 2001. , ed. by Pfeiffer, E. M. and Grigoriev, M. Reports on Polar Research, 426 . AWI, Bremerhaven, pp. 71-75.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-13
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2019-04-08
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2017-02-02
    Description: Cool-water carbonates in the aphotic zone of deep shelf and continental margin settings in the Northeast Atlantic are produced by the deep-water coral reefs withLophelia pertusa as the major framework builder. Through a compilation of side scan sonar, airgun and manned submersible surveys from several cruises to the mid-Norwegian Sula Reef Complex (SRC), the facies pattern and zonation of one of the largest deep-water reefs in the Northeast Atlantic is described in relation to the overall seabed topography. The late glacial to early postglacial iceberg scour on the crest and shoulder of the Sula Ridge provides settling ground for the scleractinian corals already in the early Holocene. Since then coral growth continues until today but was supposed to be disturbed by an environmental hazard, the so-called second Storegga event. The distinct distribution pattern of individualLophelia reefs on the Sula Ridge has stimulated a discussion on intrinsic environmental controls such as the bentho-pelagic coupling and the alternative hydrocarbon-based nutrition hypothesis.
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  • 95
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    Moscow State University
    In:  In: Proceedings of the Conference "Lomonosov Lectures". Moscow State University, Moscow, pp. 35-38.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-03
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  • 96
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    In:  Proceedings of the Research Geological Institute of the Chernyshevskii Saratov State University, New Series, 11 . pp. 123-134.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-03
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  • 97
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    Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    In:  Reports on Polar Research, 426 . Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, 186 pp.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-13
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2015-11-24
    Description: The relative incompatibility of Ar and K are fundamental parameters in understanding the degassing history of the mantle. Clinopyroxene is the main host for K in most of the upper mantle, playing an important role in controlling the K/Ar ratio of residual mantle and the subsequent time-integrated evolution of 40Ar/36Ar ratios. Clinopyroxene also contributes to the bulk Ar partition coefficient that controls the Ar degassing rate during mantle melting. The partitioning of Ar and K between clinopyroxene and quenched silicate melt has been experimentally determined from 1 to 8 GPa for the bulk compositions Ab80Di20 (80 mol% albite-20 mol% diopside) and Ab20Di80 with an ultraviolet laser ablation microprobe (UVLAMP) technique for Ar analysis and the ion microprobe for K. Data for Kr (UVLAMP) and Rb (ion probe) have also been determined to evaluate the role of crystal lattice sites in controlling partitioning. By excluding crystal analyses that show evidence of glass contamination, we find relatively constant Ar partition coefficients (DAr) of 2.6 × 10−4 to 3.9 × 10−4 for the Ab80Di20 system at pressures from 2 to 8 GPa. In the Ab20Di80 system, DAr shows similar low values of 7.0 × 10−5 and 3.0 × 10−4 at 1 to 3 GPa. All these values are several orders of magnitude lower than previous measurements on separated crystal-glass pairs. DK is 10 to 50 times greater than DRb for all experiments, and both elements follow parallel trends with increasing pressure, although these trends are significantly different in each system studied. The DK values for clinopyroxene are at least an order of magnitude greater than DAr under all conditions investigated here, but DAr appears to show more consistent behavior between the two systems than K or Rb. The partitioning behavior of K and Rb can be explained in terms of combined pressure, temperature, and crystal chemistry effects that result in changes for the size of the clinopyroxene M2 site. In the Ab20Di80 system, where clinopyroxene is diopside rich at all pressures, DK and DRb increase with pressure (and temperature) in an analogous fashion to the well-documented behavior of Na. For the Ab80Di20 system, the jadeite content of the clinopyroxene increases from 22 to 75 mol% with pressure resulting in a contraction of the M2 site. This has the effect of discriminating against the large K+ and Rb+ ions, thereby countering the effect of increasing pressure. As a consequence DK and DRb do not increase with pressure in this system. In contrast to the alkalis (Na, K, and Rb), DKr values are similar to DAr despite a large difference in atomic radius. This lack of discrimination (and the constant DAr over a range of crystal compositions) is also consistent with incorporation of these heavier noble gases at crystal lattice sites and a predicted consequence of their neutrality or “zero charge.” Combined with published DAr values for olivine, our results confirm that magma generation is an efficient mechanism for the removal of Ar from the uppermost 200 km of the mantle, and that K/Ar ratios in the residuum are controlled by the amount of clinopyroxene. Generally, Ar is more compatible than K during mantle melting because DAr for olivine is similar to DK for clinopyroxene. As a result, residual mantle that has experienced variable amounts of melt extraction may show considerable variability in time-integrated 36Ar/40Ar.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2016-02-19
    Description: Fungi or bacteria that produce secondary metabolites often have the potential to bring up various compounds from a single strain. The molecular basis for this well-known observation was confirmed in the last few years by several sequencing projects of different microorganisms. Besides well-known examples about induction of a selected biosynthesis (for example, by high- or low-phosphate cultivation media), no overview about the potential in this field for finding natural products was given. We have investigated the systematic alteration of easily accessible cultivation parameters (for example, media composition, aeration, culture vessel, addition of enzyme inhibitors) in order to increase the number of secondary metabolites available from one microbial source. We termed this way of revealing nature's chemical diversity the 'OSMAC (One Strain-Many Compounds) approach' and by using it we were able to isolate up to 20 different metabolites in yields up to 2.6 g L(-1) from a single organism. These compounds cover nearly all major natural product families, and in some cases the high production titer opens new possibilities for semisynthetic methods to enhance even more the chemical diversity of selected compounds. The OSMAC approach offers a good alternative to industrial high-throughput screening that focuses on the active principle in a distinct bioassay. In consequence, the detection of additional compounds that might be of interest as lead structures in further bioassays is impossible and clearly demonstrates the deficiency of the industrial procedure. Furthermore, our approach seems to be a useful tool to detect those metabolites that are postulated to be the final products of an amazing number of typical secondary metabolite gene clusters identified in several microorganisms. If one assumes a (more or less) defined reservoir of genetic possibilities for several biosynthetic pathways in one strain that is used for a highly flexible production of secondary metabolites depending on the environment, the OSMAC approach might give more insight into the role of secondary metabolism in the microbial community or during the evolution of life itself.
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  • 100
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    GEOMAR Forschungszentrum für marine Geowissenschaften
    In:  GEOMAR-Report, 104 . GEOMAR Forschungszentrum für marine Geowissenschaften, Kiel, 113 pp.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-28
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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