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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The seismic data were collected on the Queensland Plateau during RV SONNE expedition SO292 in spring 2022 (Betzler et al., 2022). The seismic signals were generated by two simultaneously released GI-Gun (true GI-Modus; primary volume of 45 in3) and a Mini-GI source (true GI-Modus; primary volume of 15 in3), towed 41 m behind the ship's stern and in a water depth of ca. 2.5 m. Sources were released by a GPS-controlled PC every 18.75 m at 160 bar. To synchronize seismic sources and trigger the recording system, a SureShot trigger system was used. This system allowed to display and adjust the source signatures measured by hydrophones attached to the seismic sources for each shot and therefore enabled an online quality control during the watchkeeping. The streamer was a Hydroscience Technologies SeaMUX 144-channel system with an active length of 600 m and symmetric group interval. The recording length was set to 4 s, the sample interval was 1 ms. Raw data were stored in SEG-Y format. All seismic profiles were processed on board with the 2021 VISTA® desktop seismic data processing software by Schlumberger. The main processing steps were Bandpass filtering (18/25 – 350/450 Hz), velocity analysis (every 25-500 CMP), spherical divergence correction, NMO-correction and stack, FD migration, topmute, data enhancement (white noise removal, fx deco), scaling. Processed data contained in this dataset are stored as SEG-Y. UTM coordinates (UTM zone 55) are stored at trace header position 181 (4-byte) and 185 (4-byte).
    Keywords: Binary Object; Binary Object (File Size); Binary Object (MD5 Hash); Binary Object (Media Type); Coral Sea; ICECARB; Profile ID; SEIS; Seismic; Seismic reflection profile; SEISREFL; SO292; SO292_43-1; Sonne_2; Start of data file recording, latitude; Start of data file recording, longitude; Stop of data file recording, latitude; Stop of data file recording, longitude
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 42 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: PNUD
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: Non Refereed
    Keywords: ASFA_2015::P::Population genetics ; ASFA_2015::H::Hake fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 21pp.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Las aguas marinas cubren el 70 % de la tierra. Encierran riquezas animales, vegetales y minerales, cuyo valor real es aún incalculable. Sus aguas poseen una riqueza de compuestos orgánicos e inorgánicos, comparable o superior a la de la tierra. La riqueza pesquera, fuente de proteína animal, ha sido explotada con un fin comercial exclusivamente, sin mayores bases científicas acerca de la biología y ecología de las especies, lo que se ha constituido en una sobreexplotación, que ya ha hecho disminuir y casi desaparecer a varios de sus representantes. Los peces, lo mismo que muchos invertebrados / marinos, son explotados a menudo por monopolios nacionales e internacionales, utilizando la mayoría de las veces, técnicas muy destructivas, pues en muchas ocasiones sólo el 20 ó 30 % de los arrastres son aprovechados. Es decir, sólo los mejores ejemplares son aceptados por los mercados internacionales, y el resto, que bien pudiera ser utilizado en su alimentación por miles de personas, es arrojado de nuevo al mar, como residuo inservible.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Investigación Marina y Costera ; ASFA_2015::M::Marine fish
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
    Format: 1-6 pp
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Se analizó la información de desembarque proveniente de los partes de pesca de la flota industrial costera en el año 2012 para las principales especies de Condrictios. En dicho año la flota realizó 984 viajes de pesca y un total de 8.471 lances en el área del Río de la Plata (RP) y la Zona Común de Pesca (ZCP). Las especies de Condrictios con mayor volumen desembarcado fueron el gatuzo Mustelus schmitti (254 t), el angelito Squatina guggenheim (115 t) y la raya lisa Rioraja agassizi (53 t), totalizando las tres especies el 92% del volumen desembarcado de Condrictios. Un total de 434 t fue desembarcado dentro de la categoría “Varios”, la cual puede enmascarar capturas de cualquier especie. Las épocas del año con mayor volumen desembarcado, teniendo en cuenta el esfuerzo pesquero, fueron primavera y verano, siendo octubre y noviembre los meses de mayor rendimiento para M. schmitti y noviembre y diciembre para S. guggenheim. Los valores más altos de captura por unidad de esfuerzo de angelito ocurrieron en la zona costera frente a Rocha, mientras que los de gatuzo ocurrieron frente a la costa de Canelones y Maldonado fuera del RP. Los mayores rendimientos para la raya lisa ocurrieron en el área oceánica al este de Punta del Este. La presencia en los partes de pesca de la categoría “Varios”, el gran número de lances negativos (alta ausencia) de Condrictios, así como la cuantificación de algunas especies en “piezas” y no en peso, demostraron que la captura de las diferentes especies de Condrictios está subestimada. Es esencial una mejora en la calidad de los datos de captura retenida y también descartada de las diferentes especies del grupo Condrictios para evaluar el estado de los stocks de este grupo de peces en el área de estudio.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Chondrichthyans ; ASFA_2015::T::Trawling
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 24pp.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: EMB Future Science Brief No. 11 ‘Marine habitat mapping’ presents science and policy needs and recommendations to advance next-generation marine habitat mapping. This document highlights current methods and future trends in the acquisition of data from the seabed and water column via remote sensing and direct, in situ techniques. It discusses combining data to produce maps using modelling approaches and presents recommendations for adopting fit-for-purpose habitat classification schemes. It also provides an overview of what has been mapped and where within the European sea-basins, highlights the need to increase the quality and resolution of marine habitat maps. It identifies critical gaps in habitat types and geographic extent, including the coastal areas, the deep sea, Natura 2000 sites and other Marine Protected Areas across all regional seas. Finally, it describes the need to improve the assessment and communication of uncertainty and confidence in maps, and to make maps more easily accessible to a variety of stakeholders to increase their value for end-users and to the public for Ocean literacy.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: marine habitat mapping ; conservation ; restoration
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 74pp.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Diadema antillarum es considerada como el principal invertebrado herbívoro de los arre- cifes de coral del Caribe. Debido a la significación que representa esta especie, en esta investigación se evaluaron indicadores poblacionales de la misma en las crestas arrecifales de playa Baracoa y Rincón de Guanabo, costa noroccidental de Cuba. Los muestreos se realizaron en enero-marzo de 2021. Se estimó la densidad media, diámetro medio de la testa, porcentaje de juveniles y adultos, de agregaciones y albinismo de D. antillarum para cada cresta. Las variables fueron evaluadas utilizando un transecto de banda de 10 m de largo por 1 m de ancho. La densidad media de D. antillarum en playa Baracoa (19.28 ± 14.40 ind./10 m2) fue superior al valor reportado en Rincón de Guanabo (0.78 ± 0.43 ind./10 m2) y en algunos arrecifes del Caribe. En playa Baracoa el porcentaje de indivi- duos adultos representa el 95.25 % del total. El diámetro medio de D. antillarum en playa Baracoa (5.53 ± 1.76 cm) y Rincón de Guanabo (3.05 ± 1.56 cm) resultó ser inferior al reportado en algunos arrecifes del Caribe. En playa Baracoa se encontraron 148 agrega- ciones y 40 individuos albinos. El número bajo de individuos en el Rincón de Guanabo (47) ha generado varias hipótesis que necesitaran ser corroboradas en el futuro. No se en- contró evidencia de la pandemia que sufre D. antillarum en el Caribe, lo cual se considera un indicador positivo. Se recomienda evaluar el manejo (restauración) de la especie en la cresta del Rincón de Guanabo.
    Description: Diadema antillarum is considered the main herbivorous invertebrate of Caribbean co- ral reefs. Due to the significance of this specie for coral reefs, our research focused on evaluating ecological indicators of D. antillarum in the reef crests of Baracoa beach and Rincón de Guanabo on the northwestern coast of Cuba. The study was conducted between January and March of 2021. We assessed the mean density, test mean diameter, percentage of juveniles and adults, aggregations, and instances of albinism in D. anti- llarum for each crest. These variables were measured using a 10-m-long and 1-m-wide belt transect. The mean density of D. antillarum in Baracoa beach (19.28 ± 14.40 ind./10 m2) was higher than that in Rincón de Guanabo (0.78 ± 0.43 ind./10 m2) and other Caribbean reefs. In Baracoa beach, adults accounted 95.25 % of the total individuals found in this crest. The mean diameter of D. antillarum in Baracoa beach (5.53 ± 1.76 cm) and Rincón de Guanabo (3.05 ± 1.56 cm) was lower than that observed in other Caribbean reefs. In Baracoa beach, we identified 148 aggregations and 40 individuals with albinism. The low number (47) of D. antillarum individuals in Rincón de Guanabo generates new hypothesis that have to be tested in the future. No evi- dence of the pandemic affecting D. antillarum in the Ca- ribbean was found, which is considered a positive indicator. It is recommended to evaluate management (restoration) for the species in the Rincón de Guanabo crest.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Albinismo ; Conducta ; Crestas de arrecifes ; Erizo negro de espinas largas ; Herbivoría ; Albinism ; Behaviour ; Reef´s crests ; Black sea urchin with long spines ; Herbivory
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
    Format: pp.115-140
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Documenting the seasonal temperature cycle constitutes an essential step toward mitigating risks associated with extreme weather events in a future warmer world. The mid-Piacenzian Warm Period (mPWP), 3.3 to 3.0 million years ago, featured global temperatures approximately 3°C above preindustrial levels. It represents an ideal period for directed paleoclimate reconstructions equivalent to model projections for 2100 under moderate Shared Socioeconomic Pathway SSP2- 4.5. Here, seasonal clumped isotope analyses of fossil mollusk shells from the North Sea are presented to test Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project 2 outcomes. Joint data and model evidence reveals enhanced summer warming (+4.3° ± 1.0°C) compared to winter (+2.5° ± 1.5°C) during the mPWP, equivalent to SSP2-4.5 outcomes for future climate. We show that Arctic amplification of global warming weakens mid- latitude summer circulation while intensifying seasonal contrast in temperature and precipitation, leading to an increased risk of summer heat waves and other extreme weather events in Europe’s future.
    Keywords: Aragonitic bivalve shells ; Sea-surface temperature ; North-Sea ; Atmospheric circulation ; PLIOMIP2 simulations ; Arctic amplification ; Marine heatwaves ; Summer drought ; Wadden Sea ; Pliocene
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Traditional morphological methods for species identification are highly time consuming, especially for small organisms, such as Foraminifera, a group of shell-building microbial eukaryotes. To analyze large amounts of samples more efficiently, species identification methods have extended to molecular tools in the last few decades. Although a wide range of phyla have good markers available, for Foraminifera only one hypervariable marker from the ribosomal region (18S) is widely used. Recently a new mitochondrial marker cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI) has been sequenced. Here we investigate whether this marker has a higher potential for species identification compared to the ribosomal marker. We explore the genetic variability of both the 18S and COI markers in 22 benthic foraminiferal morphospecies (orders Miliolida and Rotaliida). Using single-cell DNA, the genetic variability within specimens (intra) and between specimens (inter) of each species was assessed using next-generation sequencing. Amplification success rate was twice as high for COI (151/200 specimens) than for 18S (73/200 specimens). The COI marker showed greatly decreased intra- and inter-specimen variability compared to 18S in six out of seven selected species. The 18S phylogenetic reconstruction fails to adequately cluster multiple species together in contrast to COI. Additionally, the COI marker helped recognize misclassified specimens difficult to morphologically identify to the species level. Integrative taxonomy, combining morphological and molecular characteristics, provides a robust picture of the foraminiferal species diversity. Finally, we suggest the use of a set of sequences (two or more) to describe species showing intra-genomic variability additionally to using multiple markers. Our findings highlight the potential of the newly discovered mitochondrial marker for molecular species identification and metabarcoding purposes.
    Keywords: protist ; high-throughput sequencing ; metabarcoding ; intra-genomic variation ; benthic foraminifera
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: In the boreal summer of 2021, the equatorial Atlantic experienced the strongest warm event, that is, Atlantic Niño, since the beginning of satellite observations in the 1970s. Such events have far‐reaching impacts on large‐scale wind patterns and rainfall over the surrounding continents. Yet, developing a paradigm of how Atlantic Niño interacts with the upper‐ocean currents and intraseasonal waves remains elusive. Here we show that the equatorial Kelvin wave associated with the onset of the 2021 Atlantic Niño modulated both the background flow and the eddy flux of the equatorial upper‐ocean circulation, causing an extremely weak and delayed tropical instability wave (TIW) season. TIW‐induced variations of sea surface temperature (SST), sea surface salinity, sea surface height, and eddy temperature advection were exceptionally weak during May to July, the climatological peak of TIW activity, but rebounded in August when higher than normal variability was observed. Moored velocity data at 23°W show that during the peak of the 2021 Atlantic Niño from June to August, the Equatorial Undercurrent was deeper and stronger than usual. An anomalously weak eddy momentum flux strongly suppressed barotropic energy conversion north of the equator from May to July, likely contributing to low TIW activity. Reduced baroclinic energy conversion also might have played a role, as the meridional gradient of SST was sharply reduced during the Atlantic Niño. Despite extremely weak TIW velocities, modest intraseasonal variability of chlorophyll‐a (Chl‐ a ) was observed during the Atlantic Niño, due to pronounced meridional Chl‐ a gradients that partly compensated for the weak TIWs. Plain Language Summary Every few years the eastern equatorial Atlantic Ocean is significantly warmer than usual during boreal summer. Such warm events are referred to as Atlantic Niño events, and share similarities with El Niño events in the Pacific. In 2021, the strongest Atlantic Niño in at least four decades was observed in the equatorial Atlantic. This study is the first that investigates the complex interaction between Atlantic Niño, tropical Atlantic upper‐ocean currents, and equatorial waves based on various observational data sets. We show that the developing 2021 Atlantic Niño weakened both the background flow and the variability of near‐surface currents in May, which in turn largely reduced the strength of intraseasonal (20–50 days) waves that are usually generated by instability of the upper‐ocean zonal currents. As a consequence, the cooling effect that these waves usually have north of the equator and the warming effect along the equator vanished from May to July 2021. Interestingly, variability of chlorophyll concentration was enhanced, suggesting that enhanced meridional chlorophyll gradients compensated for reduced wave activity. Key Points The developing 2021 Atlantic Niño led to weaker equatorial surface currents and reduced vertical shear of upper‐ocean horizontal velocity Strong reduction of the surface flow, eddy flux, and meridional temperature gradient in May caused extremely weak and delayed tropical instability wave (TIW) season Reduced meridional TIW advection contributed to sharpen the north equatorial Chl‐ a front resulting in modest intraseasonal Chl‐ a variability
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-06-30
    Description: Abstract
    Description: This data publication includes the half-hourly Hp30 and ap30 indices as well as the hourly Hp60 and ap60 indices. All are unitless and collectively denoted as Hpo or Hpo index family. The dataset is based on near real-time geomagnetic observatory data provided by 13 contributing observatories. It is derived and distributed by GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences. When using the Hpo index, please cite this data publication as well as the accompanying publication Matzka et al. (in prep), which serves as documentation of the Hpo index family. The dataset is organised in yearly files, which, for the current year, are updated on a monthly basis. Typically, during the second week of a month, the data for the previous month is appended to the current year's file. The files are in ASCII files and start with header lines marked with # (hash). The Hpo index was developed within the H2020 project SWAMI and is produced by Geomagnetic Observatory Niemegk, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences. It derives from the same 13 geomagnetic observatories that also contribute to the Kp index (Matzka et al., 2021). They are listed as contributors to this data publication. With the introduction of the DOI ‘https://doi.org/10.5880/Hpo.0001’, this DOI landing page and the associated FTP server linked to the DOI become the primary archive of Hpo (while the other established index distribution mechanisms at GFZ will be maintained in parallel). With the DOI, the dataset can grow with time, but a change of the data, once published, is not possible. If necessity arises in the future to correct already published values, then the corrected dataset will be published with a new DOI. Older DOIs and data sets will then still be available. For each DOI, an additional versioning mechanism will be available to document changes to the files such as header or format changes, which do not affect the integrity of the data. The DOI https://doi.org/10.5880/Hpo.0001 identifies the current version. A format description is provided in the data download folder.
    Description: Other
    Description: The dataset is organised in yearly files, which, for the current year, are updated on a monthly basis. Typically, during the second week of a month, the data for the previous month is calculated and appended to the current year's file, both for the definitive and nowcast version. While the definitive Kp (and derived indices) are calculated from K values provided by the contributing observatories, the nowcast Kp (and derived indices) are calculated at GFZ from observatory data provided by the contributing observatories. The data are distributed in ASCII files. All files start with 10 header lines, each starting with a number sign (#, hash) and containing DOI as well as license information. Note that leading zeroes are not shown, they are represented by blanks. Missing data would be represented by -1. For more information, please refer to the associated data description and Matzka et al. (in prep).
    Keywords: Kp ; Kp index ; ap index ; Ap index ; space weather ; space physics ; geomagnetism ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 GEOMAGNETISM ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 GEOMAGNETISM 〉 GEOMAGNETIC INDICES 〉 KP INDEX ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS 〉 IONOSPHERE/MAGNETOSPHERE DYNAMICS 〉 AURORAE ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS 〉 IONOSPHERE/MAGNETOSPHERE DYNAMICS 〉 GEOMAGNETIC INDICES ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS 〉 IONOSPHERE/MAGNETOSPHERE DYNAMICS 〉 MAGNETIC FIELDS/MAGNETIC CURRENTS ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS 〉 IONOSPHERE/MAGNETOSPHERE DYNAMICS 〉 MAGNETIC STORMS ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SUN-EARTH INTERACTIONS 〉 IONOSPHERE/MAGNETOSPHERE DYNAMICS 〉 SOLAR WIND
    Type: Dataset , Dataset
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