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  • Production cost  (5)
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  • Chemistry
  • Inorganic Chemistry
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution  (7)
  • Station Océanographique de Salammbô  (7)
  • 2015-2019  (14)
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  • 2015-2019  (14)
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  • 1
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2019.
    Description: The Arctic surface air temperature has warmed nearly twice as much as the global mean since the mid-20th century. Arctic sea ice has also been declining rapidly in recent decades. There is still discussion about how much of this Arctic amplification is caused by local factors, such as changes in surface albedo, versus remote factors, such as changes in heat transport from the midlatitudes. This thesis focuses mainly on the role of poleward heat transport on Arctic amplification. Most of the previous studies on this topic have defined ocean heat transport as the zonally averaged ocean heat transport at 65∘N or 70∘N, which ignores the physical pathways of heat into the Arctic and may include recirculation of heat in the North Atlantic. In this thesis, we define the ocean heat transport as the heat transport across five sections surrounding the Arctic, to create a closed domain in the Arctic. Previous studies on Arctic amplification have used either a single model run or have compared results from a multi-model ensemble. While the multi-model ensemble approach may potentially average out biases in individual models, the ensemble spread confounds the model differences and the internal climate variability. In this thesis, we investigate the Arctic amplification in the Community Earth System Model version 1 (CESM1) Large Ensemble. The CESM1 Large Ensemble includes 40 members that use the same model and external forcing, but different initializations. This simulates different climate trajectories that can occur in a given atmosphere-ocean-land-cryosphere system. We find that CESM1 Large Ensemble projects a large increase towards the end of the 21st century in ocean heat transport into the Arctic, and that the increase in ocean heat transport is significantly correlated with Arctic amplification. The main contributor to the increase in ocean heat transport is the increase across the Barents Sea Opening. The increase in Barents Sea Opening ocean heat transport is highly correlated with the decrease in sea ice in the Barents-Kara Sea region. We propose that this is because the increase in ocean heat transport melts the ice at the sea ice margin, which results in increased surface heat flux from the ocean and further local feedback through decreased surface albedo and increased cloud coverage. We also find that while the changes in atmosphere heat transport into the Arctic circle at 66.5∘N are on the same order as the changes in ocean heat transport, they are not correlated with Arctic amplification.
    Keywords: Global warming ; Temperature ; Sea ice ; Heat--Transmission ; Barents Sea ; Arctic regions
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 2
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Oceanography and Applied Ocean Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 2019.
    Description: The Common Era (A.D. 1– present) represents a crucial period for climatic studies, documenting the timespan over which human activities have become an increasingly domineering force in shaping Earth’s landscape, climate, and ecology. Direct, quantifiable records of climatic phenomena are severely limited over much of the Common Era, necessitating high-resolution, naturally-derived proxies to extend climatic insights beyond the satellite and instrumental era, particularly across remote high-latitude and maritime regions of the North Atlantic. Here, I use modern, data-driven and physically-based modeling approaches to gain new insights into North Atlantic climate variability from the Greenlandic ice core archive. First, I investigate the climatic fidelity of ice core glaciochemical climate proxies at the microphysical-scale. I show that several soluble chemical species – key among them methanesulfonic acid (MSA) – undergo rapid vertical migration through a super-cooled liquidadvection process along ice crystal grain-boundaries. I demonstrate that significant multi-year MSA changes occur only under low snow-accumulation and high-impurity-content conditions, thus mitigating the phenomenon over much of Greenland. Building upon these findings, I then investigate the cause of declining 19th and 20th-century MSA concentrations across the interior Greenland Ice Sheet. My results illustrate that Greenlandic MSA records provide a new proxy for North Atlantic planktonic biomass changes, illuminating a 10 ± 7% decline in marine productivity over the Industrialera. I next present a new climate record from a previously-unexplored coastal ice cap in west-central Greenland. Using a physically-constrained ice cap flowline inversion model, I identify marked centennial-scale changes in coastal precipitation during the last millennium, including a ~40% increase in coastal precipitation since the industrial-onset. These changes are drastically larger than those observed from inland Greenland records, revealing enhanced sensitivity in west Greenlandic hydroclimates to regional Atlantic and Arctic-wide temperature variability. Finally, leveraging a compilation of nearly 30 annual-resolution Greenland water-isotope records, I isolate coherent signatures of atmospheric circulation variability to reconstruct changes in the North Atlantic eddydriven jet-stream over the last millennium, exposing progressively enhanced variability during the past two-centuries consistent with amplified Arctic thermal-wind forcing. This thesis thus illuminates new Common Era climatic and ecologic changes, and expands the scope of the Greenlandic ice archive as proxies of the coupled North Atlantic climate system.
    Description: To my various funders: scientific research – especially the polar variety – is wicked expensive, and this dissertation wouldn’t have been possible without the big-bucks graciously provided by the U.S. Department of Defense Office of Naval Research (National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate fellowship), the National Science Foundation’s Office of Polar Programs (1205196, 1418256), as well as generous support from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. An Ocean Outlook Fellowship from the Bjerknes Centre (Bergen, Norway) bred much creativity, and is also much-appreciated.
    Keywords: Climatology ; Greenland ; Temperature
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 3
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 2018
    Description: Many chemical constituents are removed from the ocean by attachment to settling particles, a process referred to as “scavenging.” Radioisotopes of thorium, a highly particle-reactive element, have been used extensively to study scavenging in the ocean. However, this process is complicated by the highly variable chemical composition and concentration of particles in oceanic waters. This thesis focuses on understanding the cycling of thorium as affected by particle concentration and particle composition in the North Atlantic. This objective is addressed using (i) the distributions 228,230,234Th, their radioactive parents, particle composition, and bulk particle concentration, as measured or estimated along the GEOTRACES North Atlantic Transect (GA03) and (ii) a model for the reversible exchange of thorium with particles. Model parameters are either estimated by inversion (chapter 2-4), or prescribed in order to simulate 230Th in a circulation model (chapter 5). The major findings of this thesis follow. In chapters 2 and 3, I find that the rate parameters of the reversible exchange model show systematic variations along GA03. In particular, 𝑘1, the apparent first-order rate "constant" of Th adsorption onto particles, generally presents maxima in the mesopelagic zone and minima below. A positive correlation between 𝑘1 and bulk particle concentration is found, consistent with the notion that the specific rate at which a metal in solution attaches to particles increases with the number of surface sites available for adsorption. In chapter 4, I show that Mn (oxyhydr)oxides and biogenic particles most strongly influence 𝑘1 west of the Mauritanian upwelling, but that biogenic particles dominate 𝑘1 in this region. In chapter 5, I find that dissolved 230Th data are best represented by a model that assumes enhanced values of 𝑘1 near the seafloor. Collectively, my findings suggest that spatial variations in Th radioisotope activities observed in the North Atlantic reflect at least partly variations in the rate at which Th is removed from the water column.
    Description: This work was supported by the US National Science Foundation. Two US NSF grants have supported the research in this thesis (OCE-1232578 and OCE-155644).
    Keywords: Thorium ; Chemistry
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 4
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2017
    Description: This thesis documents the origin, distribution, and fate of methane and several of its isotopic forms on Earth. Using observational, experimental, and theoretical approaches, I illustrate how the relative abundances of 12CH4, 13CH4, 12CH3D, and 13CH3D record the formation, transport, and breakdown of methane in selected settings. Chapter 2 reports precise determinations of 13CH3D, a “clumped” isotopologue of methane, in samples collected from various settings representing many of the major sources and reservoirs of methane on Earth. The results show that the information encoded by the abundance of 13CH3D enables differentiation of methane generated by microbial, thermogenic, and abiogenic processes. A strong correlation between clumped- and hydrogen-isotope signatures in microbial methane is identified and quantitatively linked to the availability of H2 and the reversibility of microbially-mediated methanogenesis in the environment. Determination of 13CH3D in combination with hydrogen-isotope ratios of methane and water provides a sensitive indicator of the extent of C–H bond equilibration, enables fingerprinting of methane-generating mechanisms, and in some cases, supplies direct constraints for locating the waters from which migrated gases were sourced. Chapter 3 applies this concept to constrain the origin of methane in hydrothermal fluids from sediment-poor vent fields hosted in mafic and ultramafic rocks on slow- and ultraslow-spreading mid-ocean ridges. The data support a hypogene model whereby methane forms abiotically within plutonic rocks of the oceanic crust at temperatures above ca. 300 C during respeciation of magmatic volatiles, and is subsequently extracted during active, convective hydrothermal circulation. Chapter 4 presents the results of culture experiments in which methane is oxidized in the presence of O2 by the bacterium Methylococcus capsulatus strain Bath. The results show that the clumped isotopologue abundances of partially-oxidized methane can be predicted from knowledge of 13C/12C and D/H isotope fractionation factors alone.
    Description: The research activities documented in this thesis were made possible by grants to my advisor from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF award EAR-1250394), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Astrobiology Institute (NAI, University of Colorado, Boulder, CAN 7 under Cooperative Agreement NNA15BB02A), the Department of Energy (DOE, Small Business Innovation Research program, contract DE-SC0004575), the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation via the Deep Carbon Observatory, and a Shell Graduate Fellowship through the MIT Energy Initiative. I completed the bulk of the work in this thesis while being supported by a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship awarded through the Office of Naval Research of the U.S. Department of Defense. The StanleyW.Watson Fellowship Fund provided support during my first summer term at WHOI.The Charles M. Vest Presidential Fellowship at MIT supported me in the first year of my Ph.D. studies. I received additional support that year through NSF award EAR-1159318 (to S. Ono and T. Bosak) and theWalter & Adel Hohenstein Graduate Fellowship of Phi Kappa Phi. The MIT Earth Resources Laboratory and PAOC Houghton Fund funded my attendance at several conferences.
    Keywords: Methane ; Chemistry ; Isotopes ; Oxidation
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 5
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2017
    Description: Blooms of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella cause paralytic shellfish poisoning syndrome and present an expanding public health threat. They are inoculated through the germination of benthic cysts, a process regulated by internal and environmental factors, most importantly temperature. Less understood is the effect of temperature conditioning on cyst dormancy cycling, which inhibits germination for long periods. This thesis characterizes the temperaturedependence of both dormancy and germination in natural A. catenella cyst populations from Nauset Marsh (Cape Cod, MA, USA), a small estuarine embayment, and relates these processes to the phenology of blooms there. Through laboratory germination assays, it is shown that dormant A. catenella cysts require a quantifiable amount of chilling to exit dormancy and attain quiescence (i.e. become germinable). A series of experiments compares germination rates of quiescent cysts across a range of temperatures through laboratory experiments and field incubations of raw sediment using plankton emergence traps (PETs). Emergence rates of A. catenella germlings measured by PETs increased linearly with temperature and were comparable to germination under constant laboratory conditions. Total emergence fluxes were much lower than expected, suggesting that germination occurs in a much shallower layer of sediments than typically assumed. The results are synthesized to develop a temperature-dependent model to examine the sensitivity of A. catenella bloom phenology to dormancy-breaking by winter chilling. Notably, the chilling-alleviated dormancy model accurately predicted the timing of quiescence (January) and the variable bloom phenology from multiple blooms in Nauset. Once cysts became quiescent and began to germinate, however, temperatures were typically too cold for growth to exceed losses so there was a several-week lag until bloom development. Years with warmer winters and springs had shorter lag periods and thus significantly earlier blooms. Ecologically, dormancy-breaking by a chilling threshold is advantageous because it prevents the mismatch between conditions that are favorable for germination but not for the formation of large blooms. Synchronized germination after winter chilling also promotes promotes efficient conversion from the cyst seedbed to the spring bloom inoculum. The dormancy mechanism characterized here may be present in other cyst-forming dinoflagellates, but there is likely plasticity that reflects the temperature regime of each habitat.
    Description: Funding provided through the Woods Hole Center for Oceans and Human Health by National Science Foundation (OCE-0430724 and OCE-0911031) and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (1P50-ES01274201 and 1P01ES021923). This work was also supported by student awards from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Ocean Ventures Fund and from the Friends of Cape Cod National Seashore. I am indebted to the NOAA Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research, the AMGEN Scholars U.S. Program, the MIT Student Assistance Fund, the MIT Graduate Student Council, the WHOI Biology Department, and the WHOI Academic Program Office
    Keywords: Marine biology ; Dinoflagellates ; Alexandrium catenella ; Temperature ; Hibernation
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 6
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2017
    Description: This thesis investigates the formation and subsequent motion of oceanic lithospheric plates through geophysical and petrological methods. Ocean crust and lithosphere forms at mid-ocean ridges as the underlying asthenosphere rises, melts, and flows away from the ridge axis. In Chapters 2 and 3, I present the results from partial melting experiments of mantle peridotite that were conducted in order to examine the mantle melting point, or solidus, beneath a mid-ocean ridge. Chapter 2 determines the peridotite solidus at a single pressure of 1.5 GPa and concludes that the oceanic mantle potential temperature must be ~60ºC hotter than current estimates. Chapter 3 goes further to provide a more accurate parameterization of the anhydrous mantle solidus from experiments over a range of pressures. This chapter concludes that the range of potential temperatures of the mantle beneath mid-ocean ridges and plumes is smaller than currently estimated. Once formed, the oceanic plate moves atop the underlying asthenosphere away from the ridge axis. Chapter 4 uses seafloor magnetotelluric data to investigate the mechanism responsible for plate motion at the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary. The resulting two dimensional conductivity model shows a simple layered structure. By applying petrological constraints, I conclude that the upper asthenosphere does not contain substantial melt, which suggests that either a thermal or hydration mechanism supports plate motion. Oceanic plate motion has dramatically changed the surface of the Earth over time, and evidence for ancient plate motion is obvious from detailed studies of the longer lived continental lithosphere. In Chapter 5, I investigate past plate motion by inverting magnetotelluric data collected over eastern Zambia. The conductivity model probes the Zambian lithosphere and reveals an ancient subduction zone previously suspected from surface studies. This chapter elucidates the complex lithospheric structure of eastern Zambia and the geometry of the tectonic elements in the region, which collided as a result of past oceanic plate motion. Combined, the chapters of this thesis provide critical constraints on ocean plate dynamics.
    Description: Funding for this research was provided by the National Science Foundation Division of Earth Sciences (EAR) grant number 1010432, Division of Ocean Sciences (OCE) grant numbers 1459649 and 0928663, WHOI Deep Ocean Exploration Institute, and the WHOI Academic Programs Office.
    Keywords: Lithosphere ; Ocean ; Temperature ; Mid-Atlantic Ridge
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 7
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2017
    Description: Salt marshes are physically, chemically, and biologically dynamic environments found globally at temperate latitudes. Tidal creeks and marshtop ponds may expand at the expense of productive grass-covered marsh platform. It is therefore important to understand the present magnitude and drivers of production and respiration in these submerged environments in order to evaluate the future role of salt marshes as a carbon sink. This thesis describes new methods to apply the triple oxygen isotope tracer of photosynthetic production in a salt marsh. Additionally, noble gases are applied to constrain air-water exchange processes which affect metabolism tracers. These stable, natural abundance tracers complement traditional techniques for measuring metabolism. In particular, they highlight the potential importance of daytime oxygen sinks besides aerobic respiration, such as rising bubbles. In tidal creeks, increasing nutrients may increase both production and respiration, without any apparent change in the net metabolism. In ponds, daytime production and respiration are also tightly coupled, but there is high background respiration regardless of changes in daytime production. Both tidal creeks and ponds have higher respiration rates and lower production rates than the marsh platform, suggesting that expansion of these submerged environments could limit the ability of salt marshes to sequester carbon.
    Description: Financial support for my doctoral research was provided by the United States Department of Defense through the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship Program, the National Science Foundation under grant OCE-1233678, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) under grants from the WHOI Coastal Ocean Institute, Ocean and Climate Change Institute, and Ocean Life Institute. WHOI Academic Programs Office also provided funding support for research, through the Ocean Ventures Fund, and for my stipend, as graduate research assistantships including an assistantship from the United States Geological Survey administered by WHOI.
    Keywords: Marshes ; Chemistry ; Metabolism ; Knorr (Ship : 1970-) Cruise KN210-04
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 8
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Paris, France
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: La détermination de la chloruration des eaux de mer est effectuée depuis de nombreuses années par la méthode volémetrisque de Moher.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Volumetric analysis ; Sea water ; Chemistry ; Density ; Water density ; Chlorination ; Methodology ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 28pp.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Les plages de la syrte mineure,caracterisees par leur faible declivite et par les variations considerables de salinite et de thermalite de leurs eaux, sont abitees par une majorite d'especes euryhalines eurythermes. La flore est remarquable par le role important des Zosteracees,des Salsolacees qui envahissent en partie les plages,de certaines algues vertes:Enteromorphes,Acetabulaires et surtout des Schizophycees qui dans ces mers ouvertes mais a eaux relativement calmes,prennent un developpement imposant dans l'horizon moyen de l'etage intercotidal; les Scizophycees affectionnent plus specialement les plages de sables vaseux ferme qu'elle s recouvrent d'une croute vegetale continue mais se developpent egalement sur les pentes rocheuses.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Ecology ; Salinity ; Facies ; Ecological associations ; Temperature ; Intertidal environment ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 72 pp.
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  • 10
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Tunis, Tunisie
    Publication Date: 2021-01-30
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Statistical tables ; Geographical distribution ; Fishery statistics ; Production cost ; Quantitative distribution ; Tuna fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 22 pp.
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  • 11
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Tunis, Tunisie
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: L'objet de la presente note n'est pas de faire connaitre les procedes de peche employes en Tunisie,ni l'organisation des principaux etablissements industriels exploitant les produits de la peche; l'expose d'ensembles de ces questions a ete fait magistralement par le professeur Gruvel,dans le bulletin n degree 4 de la S.O.S. Aujourd'hui,prenant appui sur l'ouvrage en question,nous preciserons l'evolution qui s'accomplit dans cette industrie et montrerons les efforts tentes pour la developper dans le sens impose par les conditions geographiques et politiques du pays.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Pêche maritime ; Marine fisheries ; Fishery statistics ; Fish consumption ; Production cost ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 57pp.
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  • 12
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Tunis, Tunisie
    Publication Date: 2021-01-30
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Statistical tables ; Marine fisheries ; Fishery statistics ; Quantitative distribution ; Production cost ; Freshwater ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 18 pp.
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  • 13
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Tunis, Tunisie
    Publication Date: 2021-01-30
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Statistical tables ; Geographical distribution ; Fishery statistics ; Production cost ; Quantitative distribution ; Coastal fisheries ; Tuna fisheries ; Sponge fisheries ; Freshwater ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 18 pp.
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  • 14
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    Station Océanographique de Salammbô | Tunis, Tunisie
    Publication Date: 2021-01-30
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Statistical tables ; Marine fisheries ; Sponges ; Fishery statistics ; Quantitative distribution ; Production cost ; Freshwater ; Marine
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings , Refereed
    Format: 26pp.
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