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  • Arctic tundra  (3)
  • Beach morphology  (3)
  • Eutrophication  (3)
  • 42.75
  • Fisheries
  • Polymer and Materials Science
  • Instituto de Oceanología  (6)
  • Ecological Society of America  (5)
  • 2010-2014  (11)
  • 1950-1954
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Monographs 84 (2014): 151-170, doi:10.1890/12-2119.1.
    Description: Soils, plants, and microbial communities respond to global change perturbations through coupled, nonlinear interactions. Dynamic ecological responses complicate projecting how global change disturbances will influence ecosystem processes, such as carbon (C) storage. We developed an ecosystem-scale model (Stoichiometrically Coupled, Acclimating Microbe–Plant–Soil model, SCAMPS) that simulates the dynamic feedbacks between aboveground and belowground communities that affect their shared soil environment. The belowground component of the model includes three classes of soil organic matter (SOM), three microbially synthesized extracellular enzyme classes specific to these SOM pools, and a microbial biomass pool with a variable C-to-N ratio (C:N). The plant biomass, which contributes to the SOM pools, flexibly allocates growth toward wood, root, and leaf biomass, based on nitrogen (N) uptake and shoot-to-root ratio. Unlike traditional ecosystem models, the microbial community can acclimate to changing soil resources by shifting its C:N between a lower C:N, faster turnover (bacteria-like) community, and a higher C:N, slower turnover (fungal-like) community. This stoichiometric flexibility allows for the microbial C and N use efficiency to vary, feeding back into system decomposition and productivity dynamics. These feedbacks regulate changes in extracellular enzyme synthesis, soil pool turnover rates, plant growth, and ecosystem C storage. We used SCAMPS to test the interactive effects of winter, summer, and year-round soil warming, in combination with microbial acclimation ability, on decomposition dynamics and plant growth in a tundra system. Over 50-year simulations, both the seasonality of warming and the ability of the microbial community to acclimate had strong effects on ecosystem C dynamics. Across all scenarios, warming increased plant biomass (and therefore litter inputs to the SOM), while the ability of the microbial community to acclimate increased soil C loss. Winter warming drove the largest ecosystem C losses when the microbial community could acclimate, and the largest ecosystem C gains when it could not acclimate. Similar to empirical studies of tundra warming, modeled summer warming had relatively negligible effects on soil C loss, regardless of acclimation ability. In contrast, winter and year-round warming drove marked soil C loss when decomposers could acclimate, despite also increasing plant biomass. These results suggest that incorporating dynamically interacting microbial and plant communities into ecosystem models might increase the ability to link ongoing global change field observations with macro-scale projections of ecosystem biogeochemical cycling in systems under change.
    Description: This work was funded by a DOE Global Change Education Program Graduate Fellowship, the NOAA Climate and Global Change Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, and UCSB EEMB Block Grant to S. A. Sistla and NSF DEB 0919049 to E. B. Rastetter and J. P. Schimel, and Arctic LTER Project NSF-1026843.
    Keywords: Arctic tundra ; Biogeochemical cycles ; Climate warming ; Ecosystem model ; Extracellular enzymes ; Plant–soil–microbe feedbacks
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2013. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Applications 23 (2013): 959–971, doi:10.1890/12-0447.1.
    Description: The biological benefits of marine reserves have garnered favor in the conservation community, but “no-take” reserve implementation is complicated by the economic interests of fishery stakeholders. There are now a number of studies examining the conditions under which marine reserves can provide both economic and ecological benefits. A potentially important reality of fishing that these studies overlook is that fishing can damage the habitat of the target stock. Here, we construct an equilibrium bioeconomic model that incorporates this habitat damage and show that the designation of marine reserves, coupled with the implementation of a tax on fishing effort, becomes both biologically and economically favorable as habitat sensitivity increases. We also study the effects of varied degrees of spatial control on fisheries management. Together, our results provide further evidence for the potential monetary and biological value of spatial management, and the possibility of a mutually beneficial resolution to the fisherman–conservationist marine reserve designation dilemma.
    Description: M. G. Neubert acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation (DMS-0532378, OCE-1031256) and a Thomas B. Wheeler Award for Ocean Science and Society. H. V. Moeller acknowledges support from a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. This research is based in part on work supported by Award No. USA 00002 made by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST).
    Keywords: Bioeconomics ; Destructive fishing practices ; Fisheries ; Habitat damage ; Marine protected areas ; Marine reserves ; Optimal control ; Optimal harvesting ; Spatial management
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2012. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Ecosphere 3, no 1 (2012): art4, doi:10.1890/ES11-00202.1.
    Description: Understanding the carbon dioxide and water fluxes in the Arctic is essential for accurate assessment and prediction of the responses of these ecosystems to climate change. In the Arctic, there have been relatively few studies of net CO2, water, and energy exchange using micrometeorological methods due to the difficulty of performing these measurements in cold, remote regions. When these measurements are performed, they are usually collected only during the short summer growing season. We established eddy covariance flux towers in three representative Alaska tundra ecosystems (heath tundra, tussock tundra, and wet sedge tundra), and have collected CO2, water, and energy flux data continuously for over three years (September 2007–May 2011). In all ecosystems, peak CO2 uptake occurred during July, with accumulations of 51–95 g C/m2 during June–August. The timing of the switch from CO2 source to sink in the spring appears to be regulated by the number of growing degree days early in the season, indicating that warmer springs may promote increased net CO2 uptake. However, this increased uptake in the spring may be lost through warmer temperatures in the late growing season that promote respiration, if this respiration is not impeded by large amounts of precipitation or cooler temperatures. Net CO2 accumulation during the growing season was generally lost through respiration during the snow covered months of September–May, turning the ecosystems into net sources of CO2 over measurement period. The water balance from June to August at the three ecosystems was variable, with the most variability observed in the heath tundra, and the least in the tussock tundra. These findings underline the importance of collecting data over the full annual cycle and across multiple types of tundra ecosystems in order to come to a more complete understanding of CO2 and water fluxes in the Arctic.
    Description: This research was funded by the National Science Foundation Office of Polar Programs (OPP 0632264), with a grant during the International Polar Year, ‘Collaborative Research on Carbon, Water, and Energy Balance of the Arctic Landscape at Flagship Observatories and in a PanArctic Network’. Tracy
    Keywords: Arctic tundra ; Ecosystem respiration ; Eddy covariance ; Evapotranspiration ; Gross primary production ; Net ecosystem exchange ; Water balance ; Water use efficiency
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Las capturas de langosta espinosa Panulirus argus (Latreille, 1804) en Cuba alcanzaron sus mayores volúmenes en la década de 1980 con un promedio anual de 11565 ton. En la década de 1990, la captura descendió a un promedio de 9327 ton, lo cual se ha visto agudizado entre 2000 y 2007 con un promedio de 6262 ton y una mayor variabilidad de las capturas, a pesar de un perfeccionamiento del sistema de manejo pesquero dado por: la disminución del esfuerzo pesquero y de la tasa de mortalidad por pesca desde 1999, el aumento del período de veda desde 2001 y el incremento gradual de la talla mínima legal de captura a partir de 2004. Los análisis más recientes sobre el estado de esta pesquería fueron presentados en el Quinto Taller Regional sobre la Evaluación y la Ordenación de la Langosta Común del Caribe en septiembre 2006 (Puga et al, 2006; FAO, 2007), donde se reconoció por la comunidad científica especializada que la pesquería de langosta cubana se encontraba bien manejada y plenamente explotada (no sobre- explotada) y se concluyó que además de la mortalidad por pesca, otros factores ajenos al sector pesquero estaban produciendo afectaciones en la abundancia del recurso, al causar daños al hábitat 1 en zonas de cría, influyendo negativamente por esta vía sobre el reclutamiento y la producción de langostas. Entre estos aspectos para Cuba se señalaron: la mayor frecuencia e intensidad de huracanes durante el último decenio, el desarrollo de las zonas costeras, la construcción de presas en las cuencas de captación de los ríos y de carreteras en el Archipiélago Sabana-Camagüey comunicando la isla principal con los cayos y los cayos entre si (pedraplenes).
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Lobster fisheries ; Fisheries ; Environment management ; Recruitment ; Coastal zone management
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Applications 17, Supple. (2007): S17–S30, doi:10.1890/05-1460.1.
    Description: Eutrophication of estuaries is an increasing global concern that requires development of new tools to identify causes, quantify conditions, and propose management options that address this environmental problem. Since eutrophication is often associated with increased inputs of land-derived nitrogen to estuaries, we developed NLOAD, a user-friendly, web-based tool that brings together six different published models that predict nitrogen loading to estuaries and two models that estimate nitrogen concentrations in coastal waters. Here we describe each of the models, demonstrate how NLOAD is designed to function, and then use the models in NLOAD to predict nitrogen loads to Barnegat Bay, New Jersey (USA). The four models that we used to estimate nitrogen loads to Barnegat Bay, when adjusted, all had similar results that matched well with measured values and indicated that Barnegat Bay receives roughly 26 kg N·ha−1·yr−1. Atmospheric deposition was the dominant source of nitrogen to Barnegat Bay, followed by fertilizer nitrogen. Wastewater in Barnegat Bay is diverted to an offshore outfall and contributes no nitrogen to the system. The NLOAD tool has an additional feature that allows managers to assess the effectiveness of a variety of management options to reduce nitrogen loads. We demonstrate this feature of NLOAD through simulations in which fertilizer inputs to the Barnegat Bay watershed are reduced. Even modest cutbacks in the use of fertilizers on agricultural fields and lawns can be shown to reduce the amount of N entering Barnegat Bay.
    Description: Support for the NLOAD tool came from the Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Technologies (CICEET, CICEET-UNH grants #02-610 and #04-833). Additional funding was received from Environmental Defense.
    Keywords: Barnegat Bay ; Coastal planning ; Eutrophication ; Management tool ; Nitrogen loading ; Nitrogen mitigation ; Resource managers ; Watershed–estuary coupling
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2005. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Applications 15 (2005): 1462–1470, doi:10.1890/03-5354.
    Description: Leaf area index (LAI) is a powerful diagnostic of plant productivity. Despite the fact that many methods have been developed to quantify LAI, both directly and indirectly, leaf area index remains difficult to quantify accurately, owing to large spatial and temporal variability. The gap-fraction technique is widely used to estimate the LAI indirectly. However, for low-stature vegetation, the gap-fraction sensor either cannot get totally underneath the plant canopy, thereby missing part of the leaf area present, or is too close to the individual leaves of the canopy, which leads to a large distortion of the LAI estimate. We set out to develop a methodology for easy and accurate nondestructive assessment of the variability of LAI in low-stature vegetation. We developed and tested the methodology in an arctic landscape close to Abisko, Sweden. The LAI of arctic vegetation could be estimated accurately and rapidly by combining field measurements of canopy reflectance (NDVI) and light penetration through the canopy (gap-fraction analysis using a LI-COR LAI-2000). By combining the two methodologies, the limitations of each could be circumvented, and a significantly increased accuracy of the LAI estimates was obtained. The combination of an NDVI sensor for sparser vegetation and a LAI-2000 for denser vegetation could explain 81% of the variance of LAI measured by destructive harvest. We used the method to quantify the spatial variability and the associated uncertainty of leaf area index in a small catchment area.
    Description: This research was funded by U.S. National Science Foundation grant DEB0087046.
    Keywords: Arctic tundra ; LAI ; Leaf area index ; Low-stature vegetation ; Normalized difference vegetation index ; Optical instruments ; Sweden ; Uncertainty analysis
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Se presenta un diagnóstico sobre la calidad ambiental de la laguna costera El Doctor a partir de las principales variables físico químicas y microbiológicas indicadoras de la contaminación orgánica, su estado trófico e higiénico sanitario en tres campañas de muestreo realizadas en febrero de 2006 y mayo y octubre de 2007. La laguna presenta un alto grado de contaminación orgánica, altos valores de nutrientes, así como, elevadas concentraciones de coliformes totales y fecales, y estreptococos fecales, los cuales, sobrepasan los limites establecidos en las normas cubanas de calidad de agua para usos pesquero y recreativo (NC: 22-99 y NC: 25-99). La principal causa de la contaminación de la laguna son los residuales crudos que llegan a la laguna originados por la Comunidad de los Cocos, los cuales, alcanzan un volumen estimado de 1 000 m3/día y carga contaminante de 250 Kg./día. La mayoría de los impactos ambientales identificados se clasifican como negativos muy altos. La aplicación de un modelo biogeoquímico de calidad de agua indicó que la laguna solo puede autodepurar alrededor de un 20 % de la carga orgánica que recibe. Según la simulación, la eficiencia del sistema de tratamiento bioquímico de los residuales debe ser superior al 80 % para permitir la existencia de vida en la laguna. Se recomienda el empleo de sistemas de tratamiento extensivo de los residuales como laguna de estabilización facultativa o humedales construidos.
    Description: This work presents a diagnosis on the environmental quality of El Doctor coastal lagoon starting from the main physicochemical and microbiological variables indicators of organic pollution, its trophic and hygienic-sanitary state. Three sampling cruises were carried out in February 2006, and May and October 2007. This lagoon shows a high degree of organic pollution; the concentrations of organic matter, nutrients, as well as total and fecal coliforms, and fecal streptococcus are above Cuban water quality standard for fishing and recreational uses (NC: 22-99, NC: 25- 99). The main cause of the lagoon’s pollution state is due to crude wastes originated by Los Cocos community, whose estimated volume is 1 000 m3/day with a polluting load of 250 Kg./day. The application of a biogeochemical model for water quality indicated that the lagoon can only self-depurate around 20 % of the organic load it receives. According to the simulation, the efficiency of the biochemical waste treatment system must be higher than 80 % to allow the existence of life in the lagoon. The use of extensive waste treatment systems is recommended, such as facultative stabilization lagoons or constructed wetlands.
    Description: Published
    Description: diagnóstico ambiental, hidrodinámica, eutrofización, tratamientos, contaminación, environmental diagnosis, hydrodynamics, eutrophication, treatments, pollution
    Keywords: Eutrophication ; Coastal lagoons ; Environmental assessment ; Eutrophication ; Coastal lagoons ; Environmental assessment
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Se utiliza la información de perfiles de playa en cuatro localidades de las Playas del Este obtenidos en los últimos 27 años, para describir la tendencia de la playa a mediano plazo. A partir de datos de posición de la línea de costa y de volúmenes de arena de la playa emergida se estableció la tasa de cambio de la playa utilizando la regresión lineal simple. Los resultados confirman la tendencia erosiva de un sector de la playa de Guanabo. La tasa anual de retroceso de la línea de costa ha sido de -0.97 m/año que ha establecido un cambio total de - 26 ±7 m. La reducción de los volúmenes de arena ha sido de -28 ± 8 m3/m, a un ritmo de -1.04 m3/m/año. En la playa de Santa María, la línea de costa en algunas localidades ha experimentado retroceso y en otras ha ocurrido poco cambio, sin embargo en todos los casos se ha producido un incremento notable en los volúmenes de arena de la playa emergida debido a la formación y crecimiento de las dunas. La reactivación de los procesos eólicos que dio lugar al restablecimiento de la morfología de dunas fue posible por la eliminación del bosque de casuarinas que, durante más de 20 años, ocupó la zona posterior de la playa.
    Description: The information of beach profiles, obtained during the last 27 years in four localities of Playas del Este, is used to describe the medium-term tendency of the beach. Starting from data of the shoreline location and sand volumes of the emerged beach, the beach change rate was established applying simple linear regression. The results confirm the erosive tendency of a sector in Guanabo beach. The annual rate of shoreline retreat has been -0, 97 m/y, which has established a total change of - 26 ± 7 m. The reduction in sand volumes has been -28 ± 8 m3/m, at a rate of -1,04 m3/m/y. In Santa Maria beach, the shoreline has experienced retreat in some localities or little change in the others. However, a remarkable increase in sand volumes of the emerged beach has taken place in all the cases. The reactivation of Aeolian processes, resulting in the reestablishment of dune morphology, was possible due to the removal of the Australian pine forest that had occupied the area from the beach top landward for more than 20 years.
    Description: Published
    Description: playas, evolución a mediano plazo, regresión lineal, beach, medium- term evolution, lineal regression.
    Keywords: Dunes ; Beach morphology ; Beach erosion ; Dunes
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Entre los años 1990 y 1991 se estudió el Golfo de Guacanayabo, desde 1998 hasta 2003 se evaluó el Golfo de Batabanó y el Archipiélago Sabana Camagüey fue investigado en la etapa 2001-2005, con el objetivo de evaluar los contenidos de nitrógeno y fósforo en estas tres regiones de la plataforma marina cubana y establecer las relaciones existentes entre ambos nutrientes. Los golfos de Guacanayabo y Batabanó poseen un mayor potencial de nitrógeno y fósforo que el ecosistema costero Sabana-Camagüey, debido al menor desarrollo de la red fluvial en este ecosistema, aunque en las tres regiones las concentraciones de estos compuestos están bajo una acentuada influencia antropogénica. La relación nitrógeno total-fósforo total N.T./P.T., mostró una tendencia a decrecer en regiones con cobertura de pastos marinos, atribuido a las cantidades de fósforo que aportar los mismos a la matriz agua, aunque predominaron los valores en que ninguno de los nutrientes es restrictivo y a diferencia de la relación nitrógeno total inorgánico-fósforo inorgánico NTI/P no tiene un patrón bien definido en los diferentes períodos climáticos
    Description: The Gulf of Guacanayabo was studied in 1990 and 1991. The Gulf of Batabanó was evaluated from 1998 to 2003, and Sabana-Camagüey Archipelago was investigated in the stage 2001-2005. The objective of these researches was to evaluate nitrogen and phosphorus contents in these three regions of Cuban marine shelf and to establish the relations existing between both nutrients. The gulfs of Guacanayabo and Batabanó have a greater nitrogen and phosphorus potential than Sabana-Camagüey coastal ecosystem, due to the lesser development of the fluvial network in this ecosystem; although in the three regions the concentrations of these compounds receive a marked anthropogenic influence. The total nitrogen-total phosphorus ratio, N.T./P.T., showed a tendency to decrease in regions with seagrass cover, attributed to the amounts of phosphorus that this biotope contributes to the water matrix, although the predominant values were those in which none of the nutrients is restrictive, and unlike the total inorganic nitrogen-inorganic phosphorus ratio, NTI/P, it does not have a well-defined pattern in the different climatic periods.
    Description: Published
    Description: nitrógeno, fósforo, eutroficación, nitrogen, phosphorus, eutrophication
    Keywords: Eutrophication ; Nitrogen ; Phosphorus ; Eutrophication ; Nitrogen ; Phosphorus ; Man-induced effects ; Archipelagoes
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: The results of the application of the formula of Kawamura (1951) to in situ meteorological data in order to forecast the sand transport rate due to wind action are described in this paper. A new episode of dune formation started in the 1980's in these beaches, and more recently they have been affected by aeolian erosion since the beginning of the destruction of foredune vegetation due to the increase in tourist activities in the area. Shear velocity (U*t) values on the surface were determined starting from wind speed vertical profiles. Critical shear velocity values to start the sand movement were also determined, taking into account the grain size variations of the beach material along the coast. And finally, transport rates are calculated in each case. A comparison is carried out between the transport rates estimated starting from wind data and those resulting from meaurements of the sand volumes accumulated in the dunes during 12 years of monitoring. The main transport directions are shown, as well as the direction of the resultant and their relation to the morphological and dynamic pattern of the dunes. Besides, it is concluded that aeolian transport is limited to those sites where grain size is higher than 0.5 mm.
    Description: Published
    Description: coastal dunes, foredunes, deflation, eolian erosion.
    Keywords: Dunes ; Dunes ; Beach morphology ; Sand structures ; Eolian transport
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Estero Ciego beach is located in the tourist area in Holguín province, northeastern coast of Cuba. At present, the beach suffers an erosion process, being observed the appearance of extensive rocky surfaces in the eastern half of the beach as well as a marked deficit of sand in the coast. The objective of this study is to define the engineering solutions required to improve the aesthetic and use conditions of the beach. As main action it is proposed the artificial nourishment of sand, since it constitutes a solution that creates the aesthetic conditions rapidly. As a complement to guarantee the beach stability for a longer period of time, it is also intended to reduce part of the rocky surface that presently exists on the coastline in the eastern half of the beach.
    Description: Published
    Description: beach regeneration, modeling, equilibrium profile, erosive storm.
    Keywords: Beach profiles ; Beach morphology ; Beach erosion ; Coastal engineering
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