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  • Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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  • 1
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 382 (6589). pp. 344-346.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: The conventional model whereby plume volcanism forms linear age-progressive volcanic chains, with the youngest activity occurring nearest a spreading axis (at a 'hotspot'), has been challenged for the Easter seamount chain1–4. Whereas early work suggested the existence of a linear melting anomaly (a 'hotline')1,2, more recent studies3,4 have proposed a hotspot near Salas y Gomez island, connected with the Easter microplate spreading system by an ~800-km-long, volcanically active plume channel. Here we use geochemical, geological and geochronological data to argue that the hotspot lies close to Easter Island. Moreover, new isotopic data for lavas from the seamount chain provide evidence for bidirectional flow between the spreading axis and the plume, thus supporting geophysical and fluid-dynamical models of mantle flow in a plume/spreading axis system5–7. Material balance and flux considerations show the Easter plume to be weak and cool compared with those beneath larger features such as Iceland, Hawaii and the Galápagos islands.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: A knowledge of past changes in the biological productivity of the oceans is important for understanding the interactions between carbon cycling and climate. Phytoplankton productivity in today's oceans can be estimated from the concentrations of chlorophyll in sea water1, but chlorophyll is not preserved in the sediments. Existing proxies for past algal productivity do not represent total productivity; for example, biogenic opal2 reflects the contribution of only part of the phytoplankton community, and the organic carbon record can be subject to contamination from terrestrial inputs2,3. Although chlorins, the pigment-transformation products of chlorophyll, are widespread in Quaternary marine sediments, their potential as proxy measures of past variations in primary productivity has not been convincingly demonstrated. Here we report a high-resolution molecular stratigraphic record of chlorin concentrations over the past 350,000 years in a sediment core from the subtropical Atlantic continental margin. Maxima in the chlorin accumulation rate coincide with significant peaks in the accumulation rates of biogenic opal (at the end of glacial terminations) and organic carbon (between terminations). These results suggest that chlorins, unlike other proxies, can serve as a measure of total primary productivity variations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Tellus A: Dynamic meteorology and oceanography, 48 . pp. 324-341.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-21
    Description: The free surface version of the GFDL model is used to study inflow and outflow through the Danish Straits, which connect the Baltic with the North Sea. Three problems are addressed: (i) the piling up of inflowing water in the Arkona basin; (ii) the transport ratios between Belt and Sound; (iii) the dominance of hydraulic or geostrophic control. Model results show that a cyclonic eddy (dome) is formed by the inflowing saline water that prevents this water from passing rapidly into the Bornholm basin. This eddy is enforced with increasing inflow due to a sea level difference between Kattegat and western Baltic. If density gradients along the straits are weak and the flow is dominantly driven by sea level differences between Kattegat and Baltic, the well-known ratio of 70% : 30% for the transports through Belt and Sound are confirmed. Strong density gradients can change this ratio considerably, especially in the outflow case, when the light water of the Baltic flows against the heavier water of the Kattegat. Under variable wind conditions, no fixed ratio is found. The flow in the Straits is geostrophically controlled; however, the strong baroclinic density field does not allow us to derive the transport simply from sea level inclination.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 382 . pp. 802-805.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: A fundamental issue in marine science is the identification of the factors controlling biological uptake of CO2, in high-nitrate, low-chlorophyll regions. A recent in situ iron fertilization experiment demonstrated that iron limitation is responsible for low phytoplankton stocks in the equatorial Pacific4. Here we show that flavodoxin, a biochemical marker of iron limitation, can be used to map the degree of iron stress in natural populations. Flavodoxin assays along a 900-km east-west transect in the northeastern subarctic Pacific revealed a pronounced increase in iron stress in the region west of the 135° W meridian. Addition of dissolved iron alleviated this stress. Immunostaining of single cells from the most western station showed that flavodoxin is present specifically within the chloroplasts of diatoms. Our approach provides a rapid means of defining the extent of iron stress in the ocean5 and supports the hypothesis that diatoms are iron stressed in the northeast Pacific.
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  • 5
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Conservation Biology, 10 (1). pp. 294-299.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-19
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2020-11-16
    Description: For the purpose of this study, 5 311 post recruit of Illex coindetii were collected from the fishery of the Galician shelf, with sizes ranging from 32 to 379 mm dorsal mantle length (ML). Samples were taken monthly from November, 1991 to October, 1992. Sexual maturation, spawning season and population structure of Illex coindetii were analyzed. The spawning season extended throughout the year reaching a peak in July-August, with size at first maturity in males, 128 mm ML and in females, 184 mm ML. Males mature at a smaller size and attain lower size (279 mm ML) than females (379 mm ML). The sex ratio of the whole population sampled was slightly biased towards males, nevertheless monthly variations observed and the ratio obtained (1.09 : 1) does not suggest that there is spatial segregation by sexes in the fishing ground. From the total sample, 185 males and 281 females, covering the whole range of ML's, were randolmy separated out to calculate maturation indices. A correlation between the subjective scales and the values of these indices was established in both sexes. The nidamental gland length proved to be a reliable parameter for distinguishing between stages of maturity in females. The fecundity of the species varied between 3 500 and 285 000 oocytes, (the most frequent range being from 30 000 and 200 000 oocystes) in the ovary and the oviducts. The principal axis in the oviduct contained 2 331 ± 912 eggs. The number of spermatophores in the spermatophoric sac varied between 81 and 1 555, and it was observed that the number and the length of the spermatophores tended to increase with size of the males. Illex coindetii may be considered as an intermittent spawner.
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  • 7
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    Overseas Publishers Association | Taylor & Francis
    In:  Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology, 27 (2-3). pp. 59-75.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-20
    Description: Most cephalopods are voracious and very mobile predators with highly developed sense organs that rival the equivalent vertebrate sense organs in complexity. A brief description is given of cephalopod predation and the sense organs that are directly, or indirectly, involved: (i) the vertebrate‐like lens eyes with their complex extraocular eye muscle system; (ii) the epidermal head and arm lines which are analogous to the lateral lines of fishes and aquatic amphibians; (iii) the vestibular analogue statocysts with receptor systems for linear (gravity) and angular accelerations; (iv) the proprioceptive neck receptor organ which controls head‐to‐body positions; (v) the sucker and muscle mechanoreceptors; and (vi) the contact and distance chemoreceptors. In addition, the possibility of hearing is discussed.
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  • 8
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 384 (6608). p. 421.
    Publication Date: 2021-08-20
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  • 9
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Fisheries Oceanography, 5 (1). pp. 45-55.
    Publication Date: 2020-11-16
    Description: We propose that ocean conditions of the Near Islands in the western Atleutian Arc mimic those of the shallow continental shelf of the eastern Bering Sea to the extent that the marine community, including assemblages of forage fishes and their avian predators, has disinctly coastal characteristics. In contrast, marine avifauna and their prey at neighbouring Buldir Island are distinctly oceanic. For example, at the Near Islands, the ratio of thick-billed to common murres, Uria lomvia and U. aalge, is low and black.legged kittiwakes, Rissa tridacytla, but not red-legged kittiwakes, R. brevirostris, nest there. Diets of murres and kittiwkaes are dominated by sand lance, Ammodytes hexapterus, an abundant coastal species. At Buldir Island, thick-billed murres greatly outnumber common murres, red-legged kittiwakes and black-legged kittiwakes are both abundant, and diets of the birds consist primarily of oceanic squid and lantern-fish (Myctophidae). This mesoscale difference in food webs is apparently a consequence of the local physiography. A broad escarpment on the Near physiographic block creates a comparatively expansive, shallow, shelf-like habitat around the Near Islands, where a pelagic community typical of coastal regions flourished. Buldir Island is the only emergent feature of the Buldir physiographic block, with little shallow water surrounding it and, apparently, little opportunity for other than oceanic species to exist. Patterns in the distribution of fishes, and thus of sea birds, throughout the Atleutian Islands might be largely explained by the relationship between physical environments and food webs. In the larger context of fisheries oceanography, this model for the Aleutian Islands improves our ability to interpret physical and biological heterogeneity in the ocean and its relationship to regional community dynamics and trends in the abundance and productivity of individual species at higher tropic levels.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2020-11-16
    Description: Parasites were collected from 1,200 short-finned squid (Illex coindetii, Todaropsis eblanae) caught as by-catch in a multispecies trawling fishery in the northwest Spanish Atlantic waters in 1992-1993. Parasites found included six species of helmiths, three tetraphyllidean cestodes (Phyllobothrium sp., Pelichnibothrium speciosum, Dinobothrium sp.), two trypanorhyllidean cestodes (Nybelinia yamagutii, Nybelinia lingualis), and one ascarioid nematode (Anisakis simplex B). Two of these parasites (Phyllobothrium sp., A. simplex B) which could be recognised as component species, were used in analyses of host-parasite relationships. Levels of infection varied significantly with host size or stage of maturation for both squid species. Regional variation in infection level seems attributable to geopgraphical variation in variability of prey, discreteness and movements of host populations and to size or age-related changes in the prey selection of their host. Parasite evidences suggest that both ommastrephid squids are sympatric species sharing similar econiches, and serve as diet for large top predators (selachians and marine mammals) of Northeast Atlantic. Parasites may also be useful as an indirect indicator of the migratory habits of the squid.
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