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  • Other Sources  (58)
  • Pergamon Press  (41)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-04-28
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-01-22
    Description: This contribution aims to report the reflections we had with the scientific community during two international workshops on reference materials for stable isotopes in Davos (2002) and Nice (2003). After evaluating the isotopic homogeneity of some existing reference materials, based on either certificates, literature data or specific inter-laboratory rounds, we confirm these as primary reference materials or propose new ones relative to which stable isotope compositions should be reported. We propose DSM-3 for Mg, NIST SRM 915a for Ca, L-SVEC for Li and NBS28 for Si. Cadmium does not yet have a well identified delta zero material, although three commercial mono-elemental Cd solutions have yielded the same isotopic composition relative to one another. In order to scale the linearity of any mass spectrometer, some secondary reference materials are also proposed: Cambridge-1 solution for Mg, the “Münster-Cd” and JEPPIM Cd solutions for Cd and the “Big Batch” silicate for Si. The team from Nancy propose to prepare a mixed spike solution for Li isotopes. Well-characterised natural samples such as ocean or continental waters, diatoms, sponges, rocks and minerals are needed to validate the entire analytical procedure, particularly to take into account the effect of sample mineralisation and of chemical manipulations for elemental separation prior to analysis.
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  • 3
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Oikos, 106 . pp. 93-104.
    Publication Date: 2016-05-26
    Description: Ecological stoichiometry describes the biochemical constraints of trophic interactions emerging from the different nutrient content and nutrient demand of producers and consumers, respectively. Most research on this topic originates from well-mixed pelagic food webs, whereas the idea has received far less attention in spatially structured habitats. Here, we test how light as well as grazing and nutrient regeneration by consumers affects growth and biomass of benthic primary producers. In the first laboratory experiment, we manipulated grazer presence (two different snail species plus ungrazed control), in the second experiment we factorially combined manipulation of grazer presence and light intensity. We monitored snail and periphyton biomass as well as dissolved and particulate nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) over time. Grazers significantly reduced algal biomass in both experiments. Grazers affected periphyton nutrient content depending on the prevailing nutrient limitation and their own body stoichiometry. In the nitrogen (N-) limited first experiment, grazers increased N both in the periphyton and in the water column. The effect was stronger for grazers with lower N-content. In the phosphorus (P-) limited second experiment, grazers increased the P-content of the periphyton, but the grazer with lower N-content had additionally positive effects on algal N. Light reduction did not affect periphyton biomass, but increased chlorophyll-, N- and P-content of the periphyton. These experiments revealed that the indirect effects of grazers on periphyton were bound by stoichiometric constraints of nutrient incorporation and excretion.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Ecosystem resistance to a single stressor relies on tolerant species that can compensate for sensitive competitors and maintain ecosystem processes, such as primary production. We hypothesize that resistance to additional stressors depends increasingly on species tolerances being positively correlated (i.e. positive species co-tolerance). Initial exposure to a stressor combined with positive species co-tolerance should reduce the impacts of other stressors, which we term stress-induced community tolerance. In contrast, negative species co-tolerance is expected to result in additional stressors having pronounced additive or synergistic impacts on biologically impoverished functional groups, which we term stress-induced community sensitivity. Therefore, the sign and strength of the correlation between species sensitivities to multiple stressors must be considered when predicting the impacts of global change on ecosystem functioning as mediated by changes in biodiversity.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-01-31
    Description: Recent experiments, mainly in terrestrial environments, have provided evidence of the functional importance of biodiversity to ecosystem processes and properties. Compared to terrestrial systems, aquatic ecosystems are characterised by greater propagule and material exchange, often steeper physical and chemical gradients, more rapid biological processes and, in marine systems, higher metazoan phylogenetic diversity. These characteristics limit the potential to transfer conclusions derived from terrestrial experiments to aquatic ecosystems whilst at the same time provide opportunities for testing the general validity of hypotheses about effects of biodiversity on ecosystem functioning. Here, we focus on a number of unique features of aquatic experimental systems, propose an expansion to the scope of diversity facets to be considered when assessing the functional consequences of changes in biodiversity and outline a hierarchical classification scheme of ecosystem functions and their corresponding response variables. We then briefly highlight some recent controversial and newly emerging issues relating to biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships. Based on lessons learnt from previous experimental and theoretical work, we finally present four novel experimental designs to address largely unresolved questions about biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships. These include (1) investigating the effects of non-random species loss through the manipulation of the order and magnitude of such loss using dilution experiments; (2) combining factorial manipulation of diversity in interconnected habitat patches to test the additivity of ecosystem functioning between habitats; (3) disentangling the impact of local processes from the effect of ecosystem openness via factorial manipulation of the rate of recruitment and biodiversity within patches and within an available propagule pool; and (4) addressing how non-random species extinction following sequential exposure to different stressors may affect ecosystem functioning. Implementing these kinds of experimental designs in a variety of systems will, we believe, shift the focus of investigations from a species richness-centred approach to a broader consideration of the multifarious aspects of biodiversity that may well be critical to understanding effects of biodiversity changes on overall ecosystem functioning and to identifying some of the potential underlying mechanisms involved.
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  • 6
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Fish and Fisheries, 5 (2). pp. 131-140.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-25
    Description: Marine and fisheries scientists are increasingly using metapopulation concepts to better understand and model their focal systems. Consequently, they are considering what defines a metapopulation. One perspective on this question emphasizes the importance of extinction probability in local populations. This view probably stems from the focus on extinction in Levins' original metapopulation model, but places unnecessary emphasis on extinction–recolonization dynamics. Metapopulation models with more complex structure than Levins' patch-occupancy model and its variants allow a broader range of population phenomena to be examined, such as changes in population size, age structure and genetic structure. Analyses along these lines are critical in fisheries science, where presence–absence resolution is far too coarse to understand stock dynamics in a meaningful way. These more detailed investigations can, but need not, aim to assess extinction risk or deal with extinction-prone local populations. Therefore, we emphasize the coupling of spatial scales as the defining feature of metapopulations. It is the degree of demographic connectivity that characterizes metapopulations, with the dynamics of local populations strongly dependent upon local demographic processes, but also influenced by a nontrivial element of external replenishment. Therefore, estimating rates of interpopulation exchange must be a research priority. We contrast metapopulations with other spatially structured populations that differ in the degree of local closure of their component populations. We conclude with consideration of the implications of metapopulation structure for spatially explicit management, particularly the design of marine protected area networks.
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  • 7
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Fish and Fisheries, 5 (1). pp. 86-91.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-02
    Description: Three simple fisheries indicators are presented: (i) percentage of mature fish in catch, with 100% as target; (ii) percent of specimens with optimum length in catch, with 100% as target; and (iii) percentage of ‘mega-spawners‘ in catch, with 0% as target, and 30–40% as representative of reasonable stock structure if no upper size limit exists. Application of these indicators to stocks of Gadus morhua, Sardinella aurita and Epinephelus aeneus demonstrate their usefulness. It is argued that such simple indicators have the potential to allow more stakeholders such as fishers, fish dealers, supermarket managers, consumers and politicians to participate in fisheries management and eventually hold and reverse the global pattern of convenience overfishing, which is defined here as deliberate overfishing sanctioned by official bodies who find it more convenient to risk eventual collapse of fish stocks than to risk social and political conflicts.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2020-04-28
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2020-04-28
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  • 10
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Oikos (100). pp. 592-600.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-31
    Description: Conceptual models predict counteractive effects of herbivores and nutrient enrichment on plant diversity and reversed effects of grazers under different nutrient regimes. I tested these hypotheses in 11 field experiments with periphyton communities in three different aquatic habitats (a highly eutrophic lake, an meso-eutrophic lake, and an meso-eutrophic part of the Baltic Sea coast) and in different seasons. Grazer access and nutrient supply were manipulated in a factorial design. Species richness and evenness were chosen as response variables. Both manipulated factors had significant and contrasting effects on diversity, with variable effect strength between sites and seasons. From the two aspects of diversity, evenness well reflected the changes in community composition. Fertilization tended to increase the dominance of few species and thus to decrease evenness, whereas grazers counteracted these effects by removing dominant life forms. The response of species richness was not as expected, since grazers decreased richness throughout, whereas nutrients had weaker effects but tended to increase richness. Species richness rather reflected changes in periphyton architecture. Grazers reduced algal richness presumably by co-consumption of rare species in the tightly connected periphyton assemblages, whereas enrichment may increase richness by providing more structure via increased dominance of filamentous species. Although grazer and nutrient effects on richness and evenness were opposing, there was no change in the effect of one factor by manipulation of the other.
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  • 11
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50 (22-26). pp. 3041-3064.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: In January and February 1998, when an unprecedented fourth repetition of the zonal hydrographic transect at 24.5°N in the Atlantic was undertaken, carbon measurements were obtained for the second time in less than a decade. The field of total carbon along this section is compared to that provided by 1992 cruise which followed a similar path (albeit in a different season). Consistent with the increase in atmospheric carbon levels, an increase in anthropogenic carbon concentrations of Full-size image (〈1 K) was found in the surface layers. Using an inverse analysis to determine estimates of absolute velocity, the flux of inorganic carbon across 24.5° is estimated to be −0.74±0.91 and Full-size image (〈1 K) southward in 1998 and 1992, respectively. Estimates of total inorganic carbon flux depend strongly upon the estimated mass transport, particularly of the Deep Western Boundary Current. The 1998 estimate reduces the large regional divergence in the meridional carbon transport suggested by previous studies and brings into question the idea that the tropical Atlantic constantly outgasses carbon, while the subpolar Atlantic sequesters it. Uncertainty in the carbon transports themselves, dominated by the uncertainty in the total mass transport estimates, are a hindrance to determining the “true” picture. The flux of anthropogenic carbon (C★ANTH) across the two transects is estimated as northward at 0.20±0.08 and Full-size image (〈1 K) for the 1998 and 1992 sections, respectively. The net transport of C★ANTH across 24.5°N is strongly affected by the difference in concentrations between the northward flowing shallow Florida Current and the mass balancing, interior return flow. The net northward transport of C★ANTH is opposite the net flow of total carbon and suggests, as has been found by others, that the pre-industrial southward transport of carbon within the Atlantic was stronger than it is today. Combining these flux results with estimates of atmospheric and riverine inorganic carbon input, it is determined that today's oceanic carbon system differs from the pre-industrial system in that today there is an uptake of anthropogenic carbon to the south that is advected northward and stored within the North Atlantic basin.
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  • 12
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50 (1). pp. 281-298.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Exchanges of water south of Africa between the South Indian Ocean and the South Atlantic Ocean are an important component of the global thermohaline circulation. Evidence exists that the variability in these exchanges, on both meso- and longer time scales, may significantly influence weather and climate patterns in the southern African region and the significance of these regional ocean–atmosphere interactions is discussed. Observations of the inter-ocean exchange are limited and it is necessary to augment these with estimates derived from models. As a first step in this direction, this study uses an eddy-permitting model to investigate the heat and volume transport in the oceanic region south of Africa and its variability on meso, seasonal and inter-annual time scales. On the annual mean, about Full-size image (〈1 K) (standard deviation Full-size image (〈1 K)) of heat flows west into the South Atlantic across 20°E (longitude of Cape Agulhas, the southernmost point of Africa), with just over Full-size image (〈1 K) (standard deviation Full-size image (〈1 K)) flowing north into the South Atlantic across 35°S. The seasonal variations in this transport are about 10% at 35°S in the South Atlantic and around 20% through 20°E; the model value of Full-size image (〈1 K) for summer (standard deviation ranging from Full-size image (〈1 K) in January to Full-size image (〈1 K) in March) appears consistent with respective estimates of 0.51 and Full-size image (〈1 K) derived from two WOCE summer cruises southwest of Cape Town to 45°S in 1990 and 1993. Volume transports of the Agulhas Current section through 35°S in the SW Indian Ocean range from 58 to Full-size image (〈1 K) in summer/autumn to 64–Full-size image (〈1 K) in winter/spring. The model results suggest that the inter-ocean exchange south of Africa is highly variable on seasonal through to interannual scales. If this variability is also the case in the real ocean (and the limited observations suggest that this is so), then there are likely to be significant implications for climate.
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  • 13
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Journal of Fish Biology, 62 . pp. 253-276.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-08
    Description: A set of histological characteristics to judge ovarian development was established and used to elaborate morphological criteria of 10 maturity stages of Baltic cod Gadus morhua sampled throughout the annual cycle to represent different macroscopic maturity stages. The applied characteristics confirmed most stages of the macroscopic scale, but the separation of late immature and resting mature females remained imprecise. Atretic vitellogenic oocytes or encapsulated residual eggs identified the resting condition morphologically, but not all ovaries with visible signs of previous spawning showed such features. One ovarian stage that was previously classified as ‘ripening’ was changed to ‘spawning’, owing to the prevalence of hydrated eggs and empty follicles. Ovaries with malfunctions were defined by a separate stage. Macroscopic criteria were revised by comparing the gross anatomy of ovaries with their histology. Female length and gonado-somatic index supported stage definitions, but substantial variation in Fulton's condition factor and the hepato-somatic index rendered these of little use for this purpose. The time of sampling influenced staging accuracy. A female spawner probability function based on the proportion of ripening and ripe specimens in early spring seems to be the most appropriate method to estimate spawner biomass and reproductive potential.
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  • 14
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Journal of Fish Biology, 63 . pp. 280-299.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-13
    Description: During peak spawning of sprat Sprattus sprattus in the Baltic Sea in May–June egg specific gravity averaged ±s.d. 1·00858 ± 0·00116 g cm−3 but was significantly higher in the beginning and significantly lower towards the end of the spawning season. A close relationship was found between egg diameter and egg specific gravity (r2 = 0·71). This relationship, however, changed during the spawning season indicating that some other factor was involved causing the decrease in specific gravity during the spawning period. The vertical egg distribution changed during the spawning season: eggs were distributed mainly in the deep layers early in the season, occurred in and above the permanent halocline during peak spawning, and above the halocline towards the end of the spawning season. Consequently, poor oxygen conditions in the deep layers and low temperatures in layers between the halocline and the developing thermocline may affect egg development. Thus, opportunities for egg development vary over the spawning season and among spawning areas, and depending on frequency of saline water inflows into the Baltic Sea and severity of winters, between years
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The active channel–levee system of the middle Bengal Fan was studied by a combined analysis of Parasound echosounder and Hydrosweep swathsounder data. The channel is characterized by highly variable sinuosities. Compared to other mud-rich submarine fans, an exceptionally low channel slope is found. The system can be subdivided into inner and outer zones of significantly different depositional architecture. The inner zone consists of the active channel and sharply separated vertical blocks, which are characterized by parallel, distinct reflectors and planforms of bends. These blocks are interpreted as abandoned channel segments (cut-off loops). The outer zones represent undisturbed levees, which are constructed of parallel and wedge-shaped sedimentary units. The wedge-shaped units, varying significantly in thickness and lateral extent, are found at the outer convex arcs of active and abandoned channel loops caused by overspilling of channelized turbidity currents at sharp bends. The parallel units are the deposits of turbidity currents, which spread their sediments over wide areas as their size significantly exceeds the cross-section of the channel. The complex vertical and horizontal distribution of partially small sedimentary units suggests a more complicated deposition in time and space as hitherto reported from other submarine fans. Within the inner zone, more than 20 cut-off loops were identified over a channel length of 90 km. In contrast to most other large mud-rich submarine fans, channel avulsion within the active channel–levee system is a frequent process. In particular, a temporal succession of at least 4 cut-off loops was reconstructed in the southern study area, indicating channel avulsion on average every 750 years. Channel avulsion seems to be a repetitious process caused by erosion through turbidite currents in a highly sinuous channel. Compared to other submarine fans, no morphological parameter shows a remarkable difference except the channel slope, which is significantly smaller than, for example, on Amazon, Congo and Mississippi fans. The interaction between this low channel slope and the flow parameter of the turbidity currents is most likely the reason for the instability of the active channel planform, leading to an exceptionally large number of meander loop breaches and cut-off loops.
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  • 16
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50 (-). pp. 57-86.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Combining in-situ Lagrangian intermediate depth velocity measurements from the KAPEX (Cape of Good Hope Experiments) float program with sea-surface height data, this study reviews the inter-ocean exchange mechanisms around southern Africa. In the southeastern Cape Basin, a highly energetic field of coexisting anticyclonic and cyclonic eddies is documented. Agulhas Rings of typically 200 km diameter are observed to merge, split, deform, and to reconnect to the Agulhas Retroflection. Concomitant, slightly smaller cyclones are observed to drift across the northwestward migration path of the Agulhas Rings. These cyclones, with typical diameters of 120 km, are formed within the Cape Basin along the African shelf, inshore of the Agulhas Current, and in the subantarctic region south of Africa. The data suggest the annual formation of 3–6 long-lived Agulhas Rings that eventually cross 5°E longitude, while approximately twice the number of rings occur in the southeastern Cape Basin. Within this region, cyclones outnumber anticyclones by a factor of 3:2. Both cyclones and anticyclones extend through the upper thermocline into the intermediate depth layer. Mean drifts of anticyclones are 3.8±1.2 cm s−1 to the northwest, while cyclones follow a west–southwestward route at 3.6±0.8 cm s−1. Transport estimates suggest that the intermediate depth layer in the southeastern Cape Basin is primarily supplied from the east (approximately 9 Sv), with minor direct inflow from the Atlantic to the west and south. Cyclone/anticyclone interaction is surmised to result in vigorous stirring and mixing processes in the southeastern Cape Basin, which necessitates a review of the traditional concept of Indo-Atlantic inter-ocean exchange. We propose to limit the concept of “isolated Agulhas Rings embedded in a sluggish Benguela Drift” to the northwestern Cape Basin and beyond, while linking this regime to the Agulhas Retroflection proper through a zone of turbulent stirring and mixing in the southeastern Cape Basin, named for the first time the “Cape Cauldron” hereinafter.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2019-01-22
    Description: A compilation of δ44/40Ca (δ44/40Ca) data sets of different calcium reference materials is presented, based on measurements in three different laboratories (Institute of Geological Sciences, Bern; Centre de Géochimie de la Surface, Strasbourg; GEOMAR, Kiel) to support the establishment of a calcium isotope reference standard. Samples include a series of international and internal Ca reference materials, including NIST SRM 915a, seawater, two calcium carbonates and a CaF2 reference sample. The deviations in δ44/40Ca for selected pairs of reference samples have been defined and are consistent within statistical uncertainties in all three laboratories. Emphasis has been placed on characterising both NIST SRM 915a as an internationally available high purity Ca reference sample and seawater as representative of an important and widely available geological reservoir. The difference between δ44/40Ca of NIST SRM 915a and seawater is defined as -1.88 O.O4%o (δ44/42CaNISTSRM915a/Sw= -0.94 0.07%o). The conversion of values referenced to NIST SRM 915a to seawater can be described by the simplified equation δ44/40CaSa/Sw=δ44/40CaSa/NIST SRM 915a - 1.88 (δ44/42CaSa/Sw=δ44/42CaSa/NIST SRM 915a - 0.94). We propose the use of NIST SRM 915a as general Ca isotope reference standard, with seawater being defined as the major reservoir with respect to oceanographic studies.
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  • 18
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50 (-). pp. 35-56.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The combined analysis of hydrographic, kinematic, and dynamic data collected during the 1997–1999 KAPEX (CAPe of Good Hope EXperiments) reveals a quasi-stationary meandering pattern of the Agulhas Retroflection Current east and upstream of the Southwest-Indian Ridge. The current meanders between 38°S and 40°S in a spatially and temporally continuous fashion and has a core width of approximately Full-size image (〈1 K) with an associated transport of Full-size image (〈1 K) in the upper Full-size image (〈1 K). Peak surface velocities decrease from Full-size image (〈1 K) near the Agulhas Retroflection to Full-size image (〈1 K) around 32°E. Meander troughs (northward extremes) are found predominantly near 26.8°E, 32.6°E and 38.9°E, while crests (southward extremes) are located with high probability near 29.7°E, 35.5°E and 42.9°E, resulting in a typical wavelength of Full-size image (〈1 K). Cold eddies are shed along the northern boundary of the current from meander troughs into the recirculation regime between the Agulhas Current proper and the Agulhas Return Current. Strongest cyclonic eddies are preferably shed in austral autumn. The cyclonic eddies so formed propagate westward at an average phase-speed of Full-size image (〈1 K), with, however, a variability of at least the same magnitude. Subsequently, the cyclones are absorbed by the next meander trough located upstream and to the west of the shedding trough.
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  • 19
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50 . pp. 141-166.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Rings shed at the Agulhas retroflection are an integral part of interoceanic exchange south of Africa. There is clear evidence of westward ring translation from the northern Cape Basin across the South Atlantic Ocean. Early ring development and translation from the southern to the northern Cape Basin, however, are obscured by an intensely variable kinematic field close to the spawning site. In this study unique in situ observations, obtained in March to September 1997, are analyzed to improve the understanding of the early development of a juvenile Agulhas Ring. In March the ring was surveyed near 37°S, 16°E, approximately 4 months after its generation. Its strength and size were in the upper range typical for Agulhas Rings, and its trapping depth extended down to at least 1600 dbar according to geostrophic velocities and RAFOS trajectories in the ring. Between March and September the ring propagated in a general northwestward direction; however, RAFOS trajectories and MODAS sea-surface steric height fields revealed a large variability of the translation speed (Full-size image (〈1 K) to more than Full-size image (〈1 K)) and direction. In September 1997, the mature ring was examined near 31°S, 9°E. By this time, its available heat and salt anomaly were reduced by about 30% and its available potential energy was reduced by about 70%. This indicates that a significant loss of the ring characteristics occurred on the way from the southern to the northern Cape Basin. One-third of this loss is due to changes at intermediate depth (between 800 and Full-size image (〈1 K)).
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  • 20
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (7). pp. 1279-1295.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Observations from cruises in the Arabian Sea and data from satellites are interpreted using different realizations of a multi-level primitive equation model and an eddy-permitting reduced-gravity shallow water model of the Indian Ocean. The focus is on the interannual circulation variability of the Arabian Sea, and especially of the meridional location of the Great Whirl (GW). The results suggest that the variability in the western Arabian Sea is not only due to the interannual variability in the wind field, but that a substantial part is caused by the chaotic nature of the ocean dynamics. Decreasing the friction coefficient from 1000 to 500m2s-1 in a 19o numerical reduced-gravity model, the variance of the GW location increases dramatically, and the mean position moves southward by one degree. In the eddy-permitting experiments analyzed, both mechanisms appear to determine the GW location at the onset of the GW dynamics in late summer.
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  • 21
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (7). pp. 1197-1210.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Sea-surface height data acquired by the TOPEX/POSEIDON satellite over the Arabian Sea from October 1992 to October 1998 are analyzed. Strong seasonal fluctuations are found between 61 and 101N, which are mainly associated with westward propagating annual Rossby waves radiated from the western side of the Indian subcontinent and that are continuously forced by the action of the wind-stress curl over the central Arabian Sea. An analysis of hydrographic data acquired during August 1993 and during January 1998 at 81N in the Arabian Sea reveals the existence of first- and second-mode annual Rossby waves. These waves, which can be traced as perturbations in the density fields, have wavelengths of 12�103 and 4.4�103km as well as phase velocities of 0.38 and 0.14 m/s, respectively. The waves are associated with a time-dependent meridional overturning cell that sloshes water northward and southward. Between 581 and 681E in the central Arabian Sea, we found a Rossby-wave induced transport in the upper 500m of about 10 Sv southward in August 1993 and northward in January 1998. Below 2000 m, there was still a northward transport of 3.2 Sv in August 1993 and a southward transport of 4.8 Sv in January 1998. A comparison of steric height differences between August 1993 and January 1998 calculated from the observed density fields as well as calculated from the reconstructed density fields using first- and second-mode annual Rossby waves agree quite well with the corresponding sea-surface height differences. Implications resulting from the reflection of annual Rossby waves, like fluctuations of the western boundary currents, are discussed.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Between 1991 and 1999, carbon measurements were made on twenty-five WOCE/JGOFS/OACES cruises in the Pacific Ocean. Investigators from 15 different laboratories and four countries analyzed at least two of the four measurable ocean carbon parameters (DIC, TAlk, fCO2, and pH) on almost all cruises. The goal of this work is to assess the quality of the Pacific carbon survey data and to make recommendations for generating a unified data set that is consistent between cruises. Several different lines of evidence were used to examine the consistency, including comparison of calibration techniques, results from certified reference material analyses, precision of at-sea replicate analyses, agreement between shipboard analyses and replicate shore based analyses, comparison of deep water values at locations where two or more cruises overlapped or crossed, consistency with other hydrographic parameters, and internal consistency with multiple carbon parameter measurements. With the adjustments proposed here, the data can be combined to generate a Pacific Ocean data set, with over 36,000 unique sample locations analyzed for at least two carbon parameters in most cases. The best data coverage was for DIC, which has an estimated overall accuracy of ∼3 μmol kg−1. TAlk, the second most common carbon parameter analyzed, had an estimated overall accuracy of ∼5 μmol kg−1. To obtain additional details on this study, including detailed crossover plots and information on the availability of the compiled, adjusted data set, visit the Global Data Analysis Project web site at: http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/oceans/glodap.
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  • 23
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (7-8). pp. 1297-1322.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The bottom and deep circulation in the Somali Basin are investigated on the basis of hydrographic and direct velocity profiles from three shipboard surveys carried out during the southwest monsoon in 1995 and of velocity time series from the WOCE mooring array ICM7. The inflow of bottom water into the Somali Basin through the Amirante Passage drives a thermohaline circulation, which may be modulated by the monsoon wind forcing. Details of the abyssal circulation have been discussed controversially. Deep velocity records from the mooring array in the northern Somali Basin are dominated by fluctuations with periods of 30–50 days and amplitudes above Full-size image (〈1 K). Despite this strong variability annual record averages indicate the existence of a deep western boundary current (DWBC) below Full-size image (〈1 K) at the base of the continental slope south of Socotra Island as part of a cyclonic bottom circulation. The southwestward DWBC transport off Socotra Island is estimated to Full-size image (〈1 K). The bottom and deep water exchange between the Somali and Arabian Basin north of 7°N is estimated from two cross-basin geostrophic velocity sections referenced by vertically averaged LADCP currents. For the bottom water, an eastward transport into the Arabian Basin of Full-size image (〈1 K) and Full-size image (〈1 K) was determined in June and August, respectively, while for the deep-water layer above Full-size image (〈1 K) eastward transports of Full-size image (〈1 K) in June and Full-size image (〈1 K) in August were obtained.
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  • 24
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 . pp. 1173-1195.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The differences in the water mass distributions and transports in the Arabian Sea between the summer monsoon of August 1993 and the winter monsoon of January 1998 are investigated, based on two hydrographic sections along approximately 8°N. At the western end the sections were closed by a northward leg towards the African continent at about 55°E. In the central basin along 8°N the monsoon anomalies of the temperature and density below the surface-mixed layer were dominated by annual Rossby waves propagating westward across the Arabian Sea. In the northwestern part of the basin the annual Rossby waves have much smaller impact, and the density anomalies observed there were mostly associated with the Socotra Gyre. Salinity and oxygen differences along the section reflect local processes such as the spreading of water masses originating in the Bay of Bengal, northward transport of Indian Central Water, or slightly stronger southward spreading of Red Sea Water in August than in January. The anomalous wind conditions of 1997/98 influenced only the upper 50–100 m with warmer surface waters in January 1998, and Bay of Bengal Water covered the surface layer of the section in the eastern Arabian Sea. Estimates of the overturning circulation of the Arabian Sea were carried out despite the fact that many uncertainties are involved. For both cruises a vertical overturning cell of about 4–6 Sv was determined, with inflow below 2500 m and outflow between about 300 and 2500 m. In the upper 300–450 m a seasonally reversing shallow meridional overturning cell appears to exist in which the Ekman transport is balanced by a geostrophic transport. The heat flux across 8°N is dominated by the Ekman transport, yielding about –0.6 PW for August 1993, and 0.24 PW for January 1998. These values are comparable to climatological and model derived heat flux estimates. Freshwater fluxes across 8°N also were computed, yielding northward freshwater fluxes of 0.07 Sv in January 1998 and 0.43 Sv in August 1993. From climatological salinities the stronger freshwater flux in August was found to be caused by the seasonal change of salinity storage in the Arabian Sea north of 8°N. The near-surface circulation follows complex pathways, with generally cyclonic-circulation in January 1998 affected at the eastern side by the Laccadive High, and anticyclonic circulation in August 1993.
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  • 25
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (19). pp. 4069-4095.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Three View the MathML sourceacoustic transceivers were deployed on either side of the eastern entrance of the Strait of Gibraltar during April–May 1996 to determine the feasibility of using acoustic methods to make routine, rapidly repeated, horizontally integrated measurements of flow and temperature in straits. Reciprocal transmissions between the transceivers were used to test the feasibility of using traditional ray differential travel times to monitor the component of flow along the acoustic paths. Transmissions directly across the Strait were used to test the feasibility of using horizontal arrival angle fluctuations and acoustic intensity scintillations to monitor the flow perpendicular to the acoustic path. The geometry was selected to provide ray paths that only sample the lower-layer Mediterranean water, so that the feasibility of monitoring the Mediterranean outflow using the various methods could be evaluated. The acoustic scintillation method did not yield useful current estimates, but the experimental parameters were not optimized for this approach. Since the low-frequency variability in log-amplitude was found to be highly correlated at receivers View the MathML source apart, it is possible that acoustic scintillation measurements using different receiver spacings and more rapid sampling might yield better results. The horizontal deflection method gave encouraging results at the time of neap tides, but less so during spring tides. For this approach, both theoretical estimates and measured phase differences between the horizontally separated receivers suggest that internal-wave-induced horizontal arrival angle fluctuations may fundamentally limit the precision with which arrival angles can be measured. Further work is needed to determine if a smaller horizontal spacing and higher signal-to-noise ratios would yield better results. Reciprocal travel time measurements diagonally across the Strait performed the best of the three methods, giving absolute flow estimates consistent with those derived from current-meter data. The fractional uncertainty variance for the lower layer tidal transport from a single tomographic path was estimated to be 0.017 (i.e. 98% of the a priori tidal transport variance was resolved). The spatial scales of the sub-tidal flow are thought to be significantly shorter than those of the tidal flow, however, which means that a more elaborate monitoring network is required to achieve the same performance for sub-tidal variability. Finally, sum travel times from the reciprocal transmissions were found to provide good measurements of the temperature and heatcontent in the lower layer.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2017-08-18
    Description: The late Tertiary tectonic and geological evolution of the Southern Andes at 33–34°S has been strongly controlled by the Challenger–Juan Fernández–Maipo (CH–JF–M) structural system. The present configuration of a flat slab between 28–33°S may be explained by a series of favorable conditions evolving with time since the breakup of the Farallon Plate at 25 Ma. The dramatic shift of the pole of rotation and the rapid eastward propagating rift along the Challenger Fracture Zone induced an unbalanced slab pull force, south of the CH–JF–M, that may have triggered the detachment of the subducting slab. The upwelling of a warmer asthenospheric material and the partial melts of the slab are likely consequences that are consistent with the anhydrous tholeiitic late Oligocene volcanism and the anomalous adakite-type magmatism of the early Miocene, respectively. The present seismogenic zone across the CH–JF–M tectonic boundary shows a continuity for more than 600 km along the flat slab segment, in contrast with the much shorter slab southward. Such a tectonic configuration is probably a quasi-steady condition since 25 Ma. Gravity modeling along the JF chain and the broadly located focal mechanisms at the locus of the already subducted JF chain indicate a thick (〉25 km), wide (100 km), and continuous belt of lighter oceanic crust, which is the major contribution to the positive buoyancy of the slab. The decoupling of the subducted slab at intermediate depths further contributes to the flattening of the slab, focusing the buoyancy forces associated with the thickened oceanic crust along the already subducted JF chain. The absolute plate reconstruction during the Miocene shows that the JF collision against the margin migrates southward, in agreement with geological and tectonic observations that further support the causative relationship between the flattening of the slab and the subduction of the JF chain. Preliminary deformation models for the indentation of the JF ridge against the continental lithosphere is consistent with the particular east–west trend of the Maipo deformation zone, connecting in this way the CH–JF–M major tectonic boundary in the ocean-continent lithosphere system.
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  • 27
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (19). pp. 3983-4002.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: In this paper, different types of new data sets (hydrography, Lagrangian and Eulerian current measurements) and Quasi-Geostrophic model results, obtained after altimetric data assimilation, are used to study the structure and variability of the Azores Current and Frontal system. The Azores Current was observed to transport between 11.0 and 18.0 Sv eastwards and the associated Counter Current some 2.0–10.0 Sv to the west, resulting in a net value of about 8–9 Sv. Furthermore, both data and model results revealed a meandering Azores Current, where some freely rotating eddies were also identified. These hydrographic and Lagrangian results exhibit space and time scales that agree fairly well with the dynamics shaped by baroclinic instability. Current meters moored across the Azores Current system delineated a mean Counter Current flowing westwards with a maximum subsurface core of about 2.0 cm/s at a mean depth of 800 dbar. This is in excellent agreement with previous studies, which explains this Azores Counter Current as the rectification process of the geostrophic turbulence occurring north of the main Azores Current stream. A new scheme is proposed for the formation mechanism of the freely rotating cyclonic eddies observed south of the Azores. It is shown that the north–south contrast thickness of the 17–19°C water layer across the Azores Front decreases downstream. This will create, in turn, a downstream increase of the most unstable wavelength, in a non-linear baroclinic instability context. As a consequence, both large cyclonic and anticyclonic features are able to form at the eastern side of the Azores Current (around 19°W), while at the western side (around 35°W) only large anticyclones will survive (western-generated cyclones will be small enough to be quickly dissipated). This means that the eastern cyclones of the Azores Current may live longer than the shorter western ones. However, because longer-lived cyclonic eddies propagate westwards with a mean speed of 2.5 km/day, they may be observed south of Azores and of the main stream several months later, although they were not formed there.
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  • 28
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 (17). pp. 3427-3440.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: To study the EasternBoundaryCurrentsystem off Northwest Africa in detail several CTD/ADCP-sections and long-term mooring work were carried out in the channel between Lanzarote and Africa. The observations are compared with a fine-resolution model, which was developed in the framework of the CANIGO project. The water masses, which are observed in this area, are characterised and classified in density ranges. The current field shows a high spatial and temporal variability with maximum velocities of about 35 cm/s. Seasonal means as well as currents averaged across the channel are only a few cm/s. In the surface water a steady southward flow in the middle of the channel indicates the CanaryCurrent in this area. During fall a strong northward current is observed close to the African shelf. Though the CanaryCurrent strengthens during summer and fall due to an increase of the trade winds, the transport in the channel decreases or turns northward during that time due to the enhanced poleward current at the eastern side. A northward undercurrent with a mean velocity of +2.3 cm/s is observed at the African slope in 950 m depth. The poleward transport of AAIW increases during fall and a strong influence of relatively fresh AAIW is observed during that time. Most of the observations fit well to the results of the CANIGO model, but the occurrence of MW at the bottom of the channel and the corresponding southward flow cannot be resolved by the model.
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  • 29
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49 . pp. 3529-3542.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Light abundance is a major prerequisite for primary production in pelagic ecosystems, influencing the evolution of the marine environment. Realistic simulations of planktonic ecosystems therefore require an appropriate representation of the underwater light field. Taking a look at the different biogeochemical models discussed in literature, one finds a variety of descriptions for the distribution of light, or more specific, photosynthetically available radiation (PAR) in the water column. This paper compares the effect of different parameterizations of PAR on the primary production and phytoplankton evolution at the European Station for Time-Series in the Ocean Canary Islands (ESTOC) station (29°10′N, 15°30′W) north of Gran Canaria, Canary Islands. Observations from two cruises in 1997 are used to illustrate the winter and spring situation at the time-series site. Four alternative PAR descriptions are used in a one-dimensional coupled biological–physical model of the upper ocean driven by daily forcing fields over a 5-year period. The biological model is a simple nitrate-phytoplankton–zooplankton-detritus model. Although the different descriptions are found to have only a small effect (±3%) on the annual primary production, we observe significant changes in the vertical distribution of simulated phytoplankton. The large variation (±32%) in the near-surface chlorophyll contents will be of particularly crucial importance when using satellite ocean-color sensors for model validation and parameter estimation. For future three-dimensional biogeochemical models, a computationally efficient and accurate parameterization of the light field will be particularly relevant.
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  • 30
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Journal of Fish Biology, 59 . pp. 332-338.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-06
    Description: The living coelacanth Latimeria chalumnae has a unique position in world biodiversity which raises important questions about conservation and ethics. Some relevant details of coelacanth biology are summarized, including those obtained by direct observation from submersibles. The importance of the coelacanth for evolutionary theory and palaeontology is shown to be paralleled in cultural, literary and artistic areas of human heritage. Threats to the Comoran coelacanths from artisanal fishing are described and conservation measures discussed in relation to local customs and economies as well as the promotion of tourism to spread a new awareness and concern for coelacanths worldwide.
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  • 31
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 (14-15). pp. 3179-3189.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Previous work has shown that during early summer, the partial pressure of CO2 (pCO(2)) in surface waters north of about 45 degreesN in the Atlantic exhibits widespread undersaturation. In many areas. this follows after a "spring bloom" of phytoplankton, at which time, nutrient concentrations and pCO(2) decrease sharply from their winter surface values. As part of OMEX I, the late summer distribution of surface water pCO(2) was surveyed in the northeastern Atlantic on cruises of R/V Poseidon and R/V Belgica in 1995. The pattern of the surface distribution of the sea-air pCO(2) difference (Delta pCO(2)) measured on these ship surveys was generally iri accord with that observed in this area in early to mid-summer of 1981. The greatest CO2 undersaturation (-95 mu atm) during our surveys was observed near the west coast of Iceland, with Delta pCO(2) increasing to about -60 mu atm away from the coast. In shelf waters south of Ireland, the pCO(2) was relatively higher than in surface waters of the open ocean adjacent to the Celtic Shelf margin, but the Celtic Shelf waters were still undersaturated relative to the atmospheric CO2 concentration. Because of the variation of wind speed, the synoptic distribution of air-sea CO2 flux, derived from the transfer velocity and Delta pCO(2), does not resemble the distribution of Delta pCO(2) itself. The sharp increase in wind speed at about 53 degreesN, 20 degreesW during the R/V Poseidon survey produces an order of magnitude rise in the estimated air-sea flux of CO2, to a level of about 10-14 mol m(-2) a(-1). The overall synoptic picture appears to be one of moving centers of higher air-sea fluxes that occur where storms pass over regions of surface water pCO(2) undersaturation.
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  • 32
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 . pp. 1769-1800.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Assimilation experiments with data from the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS, 1989¯1993) were performed with a simple mixed-layer ecosystem model of dissolvedinorganic nitrogen (N), phytoplankton (P) and herbivorous zooplankton (H). Our aim is to optimize the biological model parameters, such that the misfits between model results andobservations are minimized. The utilized assimilation method is the variational adjoint technique, starting from a wide range of first-parameter guesses. A twin experiment displayedtwo kinds of solutions, when Gaussian noise was added to the model-generated data. The expected solution refers to the global minimum of the misfit model-data function, whereasthe other solution is biologically implausible and is associated with a local minimum. Experiments with real data showed either bottom-up or top-down controlled ecosystemdynamics, depending on the deep nutrient availability. To confine the solutions, an additional constraint on zooplankton biomass was added to the optimization procedure. Thisinclusion did not produce optimal model results that were consistent with observations. The modelled zooplankton biomass still exceeded the observations. From the model-datadiscrepancies systematic model errors could be determined, in particular when the chlorophyll concentration started to decline before primary production reached its maximum. Adirect comparision of measured 14C-production data with modelled phytoplankton production rates is inadequate at BATS, at least when a constant carbon to nitrogen C : N ratio isassumed for data assimilation.
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  • 33
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    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Journal of Fish Biology, 59 . pp. 1638-1652.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-08
    Description: Phylogenetic analyses, using 482 bp of the mitochondrial 16S rDNA and 461 bp of the control region of 16 Diplodus species and Oblada melanura, Pagellus bogaraveo and Pagellus acarne, all close relatives of Diplodus, identified the two representatives of Pagellus as the sister group of Diplodus. Oblada melanura was confirmed as the sister taxon of D. puntazzo, despite its different dental morphology and ecology. Within the genus Diplodus, three clades were identified, the first containing D. annularis and D. bellottii, the second D. vulgaris and D. prayensis, and the third comprising three subclades. These were formed by O. melanura clustering with D. puntazzo, D. fasciatus with D. cervinus, and by the Diplodus sargus sub-species assemblage which also included the West Atlantic taxa D. argenteus, D. bermudensis, D. holbrooki, and the Red Sea endemic D. noct. All members of the D. sargus assemblage were genetically closely related. Among them, D. sargus lineatus from the Cape Verde islands was resolved as most ancestral branch, pointing to the possibility that the diversification and spread of the D. sargus assemblage originated in this region. The hypothesis of stepwise speciation following colonization events within the D. sargus complex is fully supported by phylogenetic reconstruction.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: In the framework of the Ocean Margin Exchange project, a multi-disciplinary study has been conducted at the shelf edge and slope of the Goban Spur in order to determine the spatial distribution, quantity and quality of particle flux, and delineate the transport mechanisms of the major organic and inorganic components. We present here a synthesis view of the major transport modes of both biogenic and lithogenic material being delivered to the open slope of the Goban Spur. We attempt to differentiate between the direct biogenic flux from the surface mixed layer and the advective component, both biogenic and lithogenic. Long-term moorings, instrumented with sediment traps, current meters and transmissometers have yielded samples and near-continuous recordings of hydrographic variables (current direction and speed, temperature and salinity) and light transmission for a period of 2.5 years. Numerous stations have been occupied for CTD casts with light transmission and collection of water samples. The sedimenting material has been analysed for a variety of marker compounds including phytoplankton pigments, isotopic, biomineral and trace metal composition and microscopical analyses. These samples are augmented by seasonal information on the distribution and composition of fine particles and marine snow in the water column. The slope shows well-developed bottom nepheloid layers always present and intermediate nepheloid layers intermittently present. Concentrations are mainly in the range 50–130 mg m−3 in nepheloid layers and 6–25 mg m−3 in clear water. A seasonal variability in the concentration at the clear water minimum is argued to be related to seasonal variations in vertical flux and aggregate break-up in transit during summer months. It is suggested that the winter sink for this seasonal change in particulate matter involves some re-aggregation and scavenging, and some conversion of particulate to dissolved organic matter. This may provide a slow seasonal pump of dissolved organic carbon to the deep ocean interior. Differences in trapped quantities at different water depths are interpreted as due to lateral flux from the continental margin. There is a major lateral input between 600 and 1050 m at an inner station and between 600 and 1440 m at an outer one. The transport is thought to be related to intermediate nepheloid layers, but those measured are too dilute to be able to supply the flux. Observed bottom nepheloid layers are highly concentrated very close to the bed (up to 5 g m−3), with a population of large aggregates. Some of these are capable of delivering the flux seen offshore during intermittent detachment of nepheloid layers into mid-water. Concentrated bottom nepheloid layers are also able to deliver large particles with unstable phytoplankton pigments to the deep sea floor in a few tens of days. Calculated CaCO3 fluxes are adjusted for dissolution, which is inferred from Ca/Al ratios to be occurring in the CaCO3-saturated upper water column where up to 80% of the CaCO3 resulting from primary production is dissolved.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The benthic diagenetic model OMEXDIA has been used to reproduce observed benthic pore water and solid phase profiles obtained during the OMEX study in the Goban Spur Area (N.E. Atlantic), and to dynamically model benthic profiles at site OMEX III (3660-m depth), with the sediment trap organic flux as external forcing. The results of the dynamic modelling show that the organic flux as determined from the lowermost sediment trap (400 metres above the bottom) at OMEX III is insufficient to explain the organic carbon and pore water profiles. The best fitting was obtained by maintaining the seasonal pattern as observed in the traps, while multiplying the absolute values of the flux by a factor of 1.85. The “inverse modelling” of diagenetic processes resulted in estimates of total mineralisation rate and of degradability of the organic matter at the different stations. These diagenetic model-based estimates are used to constrain the patterns of lateral and vertical transports of organic matter. Using the observed degradability as a function of depth, we show that the observed organic matter fluxes at the different depths are consistent with a model where at all stations along the gradient the same vertical export flux occurs at 200 m, and where organic matter sinks with a constant sinking rate of around 130 m d−1. If sinking rates were higher, in the order of 200 m d−1, the observations could be consistent with an off-slope gradient in export production of approximately a factor of 1.5 between the shallowest and deepest sites. The derived high degradability of the arriving organic matter and the consistency of the mass fluxes at the different stations exclude the possibility of a massive deposition, on the margin, of organic matter produced on the shelf or shelf break. However, other hypotheses to explain the patterns found in the sediment trap data of both OMEX and other continental margin study sites also suffer from different inconsistencies. Further, close examination of the flow patterns at the margin will be needed to examine the question.
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  • 36
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 (10). pp. 2141-2154.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Starting with the North Atlantic Bloom Experiment in 1989 oceanographers from 2 variety of countries and scientific disciplines have studied biogeochemical processes in the North Atlantic ocean as a contribution to the Jomt Global Ocean Flux Study (JGOFS). The papers collected in this special issue of Deep-Sea Research Part II are a contribution to the oncjoing international sqnthesis of this decade long effect. In the introduction we give an overview on the major results presented by the individual papers.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: We provide an overview of the role of biological processes in the Benthic boundary layer (BBL) and in sediments on the cycling of particulate organic material in the Goban Spur area (Northeast Atlantic). The benthic fauna, sediment and BBL characteristics were studied along a transect ranging from 208 to 4460 m water depth in different seasons over 3 years. Near-bottom flow velocities are high at the upper part of the slope (1000–1500 m), and high numbers of filter-feeding taxa are found there such that organic carbon normally passing this area during high flow conditions is probably trapped, accumulated, and/or remineralised by the fauna. Overall metabolism in shelf and upper slope sediments is dominated by the macrofauna. More than half of the organic matter flux is respired by macrofauna, with a lower contribution of metazoan meiofauna (4%) and anoxic and suboxic bacterial mineralisation (21%); the remainder (23%) being channelled through nanobiota and oxic bacteria. By its feeding activity and movement, the macrofauna intensely reworks the sediments on the shelf and upper slope. Mixing intensity of bulk sediment and of organic matter are of comparable magnitude. The benthos of the lower slope and abyssal depth is dominated by the microbiota, both in terms of total biomass (〉90%) and carbon respiration (about 80%). The macrofauna (16%), meiofauna (4%) and megafauna (0.5%) only marginally contribute to total carbon respiration at depths below 1400 m. Because large animals have a lower share in total metabolism, mixing of organic matter within the sediments is reduced by a factor of 5, whereas mixing of bulk sediment is one to two orders of magnitude lower than on the shelf. The food quality of organic matter in the sediments in the shallowest part of the Goban Spur transect is significantly higher than in sediments in the deeper parts. The residence time of mineralisable carbon is about 120 d on the shelf and compares well with the residence time of the biota. In the deepest station, the mean residence time of mineralisable carbon is more than 3000 d, an order of magnitude higher than that of biotic biomass.
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Bottom-tethered sediment traps deployed in the deep eastern North Atlantic between 54°N 20°W and 33°N 20°W (L1, L2, L3), at the European continental margin at 49°N (OMEX) and off the Canary Islands (ESTOC) were investigated for the determination of 230Th trapping efficiencies. The ratios of 230Th flux measured in the traps (Fa) to the expected 230Th flux from the production rate of 230Th in the overlying water column (Fp) ranged between 0.09 and 1.26. For the traps with deployment periods 〉300 days the interannual variation of Fa/Fp ratios (different years but same location and water depth) were up to 10%, suggesting that the average 230Th flux to the sediment traps did not vary significantly. The influence of lateral advection on the 230Th flux was taken into account either by applying a mass balance of 230Th and 231Pa or by assuming a constant removal rate of 230Th from the water column, an assumption based on similar 230Th concentration-depth profiles observed at most locations investigated. 230Th trapping efficiencies were between 9 and 143%, showing a trend of increasing efficiencies with increasing water depth. No relation was found between current velocities and 230Th trapping efficiencies. Our investigations suggest that the observation of constant or even increasing particle flux rates with increasing water depths in several sediment trap arrays investigated may be a result of sediment trap biases. The correction for the trapping biases is important for the understanding of the regional differences in the particle flux in the eastern North Atlantic.
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  • 39
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 . pp. 3737-3756.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: A geochemical model of the Peru Basin deep-sea floor, based on an extensive set of field data as well as on numerical simulations, is presented. The model takes into account the vertical oscillations of the redox zonation that occur in response to both long-term (glacial/interglacial) and short-term (El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) time scale) variations in the depositional flux of organic matter. Field evidence of reaction between the pore water NO3− and an oxidizable fraction of the structural Fe(II) in the clay mineral content of the deep-sea sediments is provided. The conditions of formation and destruction of reactive clay Fe(II) layers in the sea floor are defined, whereby a new paleo-redox proxy is established. Transitional NO3− profile shapes are explained by periodic contractions and expansions of the oxic zone (ocean bottom respiration) on the ENSO time scale. The near-surface oscillations of the oxic–suboxic boundary constitute a redox pump mechanism of major importance with respect to diagenetic trace metal enrichments and manganese nodule formation, which may account for the particularly high nodule growth rates in this ocean basin. These conditions are due to the similar depth ranges of both the O2 penetration in the sea floor and the bioturbated high reactivity surface layer (HRSL), all against the background of ENSO-related large variations in depositional Corg flux. Removal of the HRSL in the course of deep-sea mining would result in a massive expansion of the oxic surface layer and, thus, the shut down of the near-surface redox pump for centuries, which is demonstrated by numerical modeling.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2017-01-31
    Description: Destructive macroalgal mass blooms threaten estuarine and coastal ecosystems worldwide. We asked which factors regulate macroalgal bloom intensity, distribution and species composition. In field experiments in the Baltic Sea, we analyzed the relative effects of nutrients, herbivores and algal propagule banks on population development and dominance patterns in two co-occurring bloom-forming macroalgae, Enteromorpha intestinalis and Pilayella littoralis. Both species were highly affected by the combined effects of a propagule bank, herbivory and nutrients. The magnitude of effects varied with season. The propagule bank was an important overwintering mechanism for both algae, and allowed for recruitment two months earlier than recruitment via freshly dispersed propagules. This provided a seasonal escape from intense herbivory and nutrient limitation later in the year. Favored by massive recruitment from the propagule bank, Enteromorpha was the superior space occupier in early spring, thereby reducing recruitment of Pilayella. Elimination of the propagule bank and recruitment via freshly dispersed propagules favored Pilayella. Strong and selective herbivory on Enteromorpha supported Pilayella in the presence, but not in the absence of the propagule bank. Nutrient enrichment in summer counteracted herbivore pressure on Enteromorpha, thereby negatively affecting Pilayella. Herbivore and nutrient effects were more pronounced for early life stages than adult algae. These results show that recruitment processes and forces affecting early life stages at the beginning of the vegetation period determine development and dominance patterns of macroalgal blooms. Herbivores naturally suppress blooms but increasing nutrient enrichment can override this important control mechanism. The propagule bank plays a previously unrecognized role for population and community dynamics.
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  • 41
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 47 (14). pp. 2785-2804.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: During the large-scale deep-sea programme BIGSET in situ measurements of sediment community oxygen consumption (SCOC) were carried out during three cruises between 1995–1998 at five abyssal sites (3190–4450 m water depth) in the deep Arabian Sea in order to elucidate the regional and temporal variation of benthic carbon remineralisation. SCOC ranged from 0.9–6.3 mmol O2 m−2 d−1, with highest values in the western and northern Arabian Sea and lowest values in the southern Arabian Sea. For the central Arabian Sea intermediate oxygen uptake rates were detected. This regional pattern mirrors the overall regional pattern of primary productivity in surface waters and vertical particulate organic carbon (POC) flux at 1000 mab. Primary productivity in Arabian Sea surface waters and particulate flux into the deep-sea are controlled by the monsoon system and the flux maxima during the SW and NE monsoon are among the highest particle fluxes recorded in the deep open ocean. Highest flux rates were recorded in the western and northern Arabian Sea and decreased towards the central and southern Arabian Sea. SCOC at our western, northern and eastern Arabian Sea stations WAST, NAST and EAST were considerably higher than so far detected in other abyssal areas of the global oceans, and vertical POC flux can account for only 20–50% of benthic carbon remineralisation (BCR). Possible explanations for the high rates of BCR at these stations that are situated close to the continental margins are discussed: the accelerated deposition of very labile organic matter due to eolian dust particles, enhanced rain efficiencies, and lateral advection. A significant temporal variability in SCOC only could be detected at the eastern and western Arabian Sea stations WAST and EAST.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Benthic fluxes and pore-water compositions of silicic acid, nitrate and phosphate were investigated for surface sediments of the abyssal Arabian Sea during four cruises (1995-1998). Five sites located in the northern (NAST), western (WAST), central (CAST), eastern (EAST), and southern (SAST) Arabian Sea were revisited during intermonsoonal periods after the NE- and SW-Monsoon. At these sites, benthic fluxes of remineralized nutrients from the sediment to the bottom water of 36-106, 102-350 and 4-16 mmol m-2 yr-1 were measured for nitrate, silicic acid and phosphate, respectively. The benthic fluxes and pore-water compositions showed a distinct regional pattern. Highest fluxes were observed in the western and northern region of the Arabian Sea, whereas decreasing fluxes were derived towards the southeast. At WAST, the general temporal pattern of primary production, related to the NE- and SW-Monsoon, is reflected by benthic fluxes. In contrast, at sites NAST, SAST, CAST, and EAST a temporal pattern of fluxes in response to the monsoon is not obvious. Our results reveal a clear coupling between the general regional pattern of production in surface waters and the response of the benthic environment, as indicated by the flux of remineralized nutrients, though a spatially differing degree of decoupling during transport and remineralization of particulate organic matter and biogenic opal was observed. This has to be taken into account regarding budget calculations and paleoceanographic topics.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Effects of monsoon-induced enhanced depositional regimes of particulate organic carbon (POC) on regional variability and distribution patterns and size spectra of metazoan meiofauna, particularly of nematodes, were investigated at five sites 3158–4414 m deep in the Arabian Sea. The sampling sites were subjected to different flux rates of POC. Total meiofaunal abundance ranged from 109 to 320 ind./10 cm2. Nematodes were the numerically most abundant taxon, with a relative abundance of 82.5–88.7%, followed by copepods and ostracods. Mean individual nematode biomass ranged from 0.0272 to 0.1033 μgC, and Mean nematode population biomass varied between 0.0026 and 0.0133 mgC/10 cm2. Mean nematode lengths ranged from 614.2 to 832.6 μm. The length distributions of nematodes at the different sites were typically skewed with the distributions extending into the longer size classes. At the sites with higher POC deposition rates, nematodes displayed deeper distributions in the sediment column (47.4–58.5% of nematodes in the top 1 cm layer of the sediment) in contrast to very shallow distributions at a site of low POC flux (75.1% of nematodes in the top 1 cm of the sediment). Regional variability of nematode biomass, size and vertical distribution was related to monsoon-driven gradients of POC- and chlorophyll a (chl. a) flux rates and bacterial biomass i.e. bioavailable organic carbon. This was in contrast to nematode abundance which did not correlate significantly with any of these environmental parameters. The differential pattern between biomass and abundance, distribution might be related to POC-dependent alterations in the species composition of the nematode assemblages at the different sites. The hypothesis of increased meiobenthic stocks due to monsoon-induced enhanced sedimentation could not be confirmed compared to data from other less productive oceanic regions. Nematode abundance and biomass in the Arabian Sea were similar to values obtained from the abyssal temperate NE-Atlantic.
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  • 44
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 47 . pp. 2615-2628.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
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  • 45
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 47 (14). pp. 2805-2833.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: As part of the large-scale, interdisciplinary deep-sea study “BIGSET”, the relationship between the monsoon-induced regional and temporal variability of POC deposition and the small-sized benthic community was investigated at several sites 2316–4420 m deep in the Arabian Sea during four cruises between 1995 and 1998. Vertical and horizontal distribution patterns of chloroplastic pigments (a measure of phytodetritus deposition), readily soluble protein and activity, and biomass parameters of the small-sized benthic community (Electron Transport System Activity (ETSA); bacterial ectoenzymatic activity (FDA turnover) and DNA concentrations) were measured concurrently with the vertical fluxes of POC and chloroplastic pigments. Sediment chlorophyll a (chl. a) profiles were used to calculate chl. a flux rates and to estimate POC flux across the sediment water interface using two different transport reaction models. These estimates were compared with corresponding flux rates determined in sediment traps. Regional variability of primary productivity and POC deposition at the deep-sea floor creates a trophic gradient in the Arabian Basin from the NW to the SE, which is primarily related to the activity of monsoon winds and processes associated with the topography of the Arabian Basin and the vicinity of land masses. Inventories of sediment chloroplastic pigments closely corresponded to this trophic gradient. For ETSA, FDA and DNA, however, no clear coupling was found, although stations WAST (western Arabian Sea) and NAST (northern Arabian Sea) were characterised by high concentrations and activities. These parameters exhibited high spatial and temporal variability, making it impossible to recognise clear mechanisms controlling temporal and spatial community patterns of the small-sized benthic biota. Nevertheless, the entire Arabian Basin was recognised as being affected by monsoonal activity. Comparison of two different transport reaction models indicates that labile chl. a buried in deeper sediment layers may escape rapid degradation in Arabian deep-sea sediments.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The distribution, biomass, and diversity of living (Rose Bengal stained) deep-sea benthic foraminifera (〉30 [mu]m) were investigated with multicorer samples from seven stations in the Arabian Sea during the intermonsoonal periods in March and in September/October, 1995. Water depths of the stations ranged between 1916 and 4425 m. The distribution of benthic foraminifera was compared with dissolved oxygen, % organic carbon, % calcium carbonate, ammonium, % silica, chloroplastic pigment equivalents, sand content, pore water content of the sediment, and organic carbon flux to explain the foraminiferal patterns and depositional environments. A total of six species-communities comprising 178 living species were identified by principal component analysis. The seasonal comparison shows that at the western stations foraminiferal abundance and biomass were higher during the Spring Intermonsoon than during the Fall Intermonsoon. The regional comparison indicates a distinct gradient in abundance, biomass, and diversity from west to east, and for biomass from north to south. Highest values are recorded in the western part of the Arabian Sea, where the influence of coastal and offshore upwelling are responsible for high carbon fluxes. Estimated total biomass of living benthic foraminifera integrated for the upper 5 cm of the sediment ranged between 11 mg Corg m-2 at the southern station and 420 mg Corg m-2 at the western station. Foraminifera in the size range from 30 to 125 [mu]m, the so-called microforaminifera, contributed between 20 and 65% to the abundance, but only 3% to 28% to the biomass of the fauna. Highest values were found in the central and southern Arabian Sea, indicating their importance in oligotrophic deep-sea areas. The overall abundance of benthic foraminifera is positively correlated with oxygen content and pore volume, and partly with carbon content and chloroplastic pigment equivalents of the sediment. The distributional patterns of the communities seem to be controlled by sand fraction, dissolved oxygen, calcium carbonate and organic carbon content of the sediment, but the critical variables are of different significance for each community.
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  • 47
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 47 (9-11). pp. 1791-1808.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: δ13C values of N. pachyderma (sin.) from the water column and from core top sediments are compared in order to determine the 13C decrease caused by the addition of anthropogenic CO2 to the atmosphere. This effect, which is referred to as the surface ocean Suess effect, is estimated to be about −0.9‰(±0.2‰) within the Arctic Ocean halocline waters and to about −0.6‰(±0.1‰) in the Atlantic-derived waters of the southern Nansen Basin. This means that the area where the Arctic Ocean halocline waters are formed, the Arctic shelf regions, are relatively well ventilated with respect to CO2. Nevertheless, δ13C of dissolved inorganic carbon (δ13CDIC) in the Arctic Ocean halocline waters is far from isotopic equilibrium. Absolute values of δ13C of N. pachyderma (sin.) covary with the surface ocean Suess effect, and we interprete changes in both parameters as a reflection of the degree of ventilation of the waters on the shelf sea. Measurements of δ13C of N. pachyderma (sin.) in the Arctic Ocean from plankton tows reveal a “vital effect” of about −2‰, significantly different from other published values. A first-order estimate of the total anthropogenic carbon inventory shows, that despite of its permanent sea-ice cover, the Arctic Ocean, with 2% of the global ocean area, is responsible for about 4–6% of the global ocean's CO2 uptake.
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  • 48
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Handbook of Geophysical Exploration, Section 1: Seismic Exploration, London, Pergamon Press, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 271-306, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Mining geophysics ; Handbook of geophysics ; Review article
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2020-04-23
    Description: Energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis was used to localize the two brominated natural products (aerothinonin and homoaerothionin) in the tissues of a marine demosponge, Aplysina fistularis. Virtually all of these compounds were localized within the spherules of the spherulous cells in the mesohyl. This is the first localization of any secondary metabolite at the cellular or sub-cellular level in any marine invertebrate. In Aplysina fistularis, as in other species of the same genus studied by Vacelet, the spherulous cells are concentrated just beneath the exopinacoderm and just beneath the endopinacoderm of the excurrent canals. Moreover, there is electron microscopic evidence for degeneration of some spherulous cells throughout the mesohyl. Presumably, this degeneration can release some aerothionin and homoaerothionin, which are known to have antibiotic properties. After release from the spherulous cells, these brominated natural products could function (1) within the mesohyl to exclude some types of bacteria or to aggregate ingested bacteria and/or (2) within the boundary layer of the surrounding seawater for defense or offense, as considered in the discussion section.
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  • 50
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 11, no. 16, pp. 220, (ISBN: 0-08-037951-6)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Rock mechanics
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2015-10-06
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  • 52
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 26A (Suppl. 1). pp. 217-224.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Current and wind stress time series obtained from the F1-mooring are analysed with the aim of examining linear correspondences and testing the adequacy of linear coupling models at near-inertial frequencies. Significant linear correlations are found in the data set which are consistent with a linear winddriven model of the current system. The current in the mixed layer can be described by inertial oscillations directly forced by the local wind stress. A wind-driven simulation model of the mixed layer currents yields an energy input of 3.10-3 W/m2. The current in the thermocline can be described by a linear internal wave field of downward propagating wave groups driven via Ekman suction by the wind stress field. Internal waves are generated at a rate of 10-3 W/m2, consistently estimated from both kinematic and dynamic considerations.
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  • 53
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 26A (Suppl. 1). pp. 217-224.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: During a multi-institutional air-sea interaction experiment (GATE) in the central Atlantic North Equatorial Countercurrent in September 1974, vector-averaging current meter (VACM) measurements were made within the 30-m thick mixed layer from three different types of surface moorings. The moorings consisted of a single-point taut-line flexible mooring (E3), a spar-buoy (El), and a 2-legged mooring (Fl). Although the kinetic energy density spectral estimates of the E3, El, and Fl records in the low frequency range were equivalent with 95% confidence, the mean progressive vector diagrams differed by 6 % in length and 4 in direction. At frequencies above 1 cph the variances of the 7.2 m Fl current vectors were about 1.5 times larger than the 7.6 m E3 data and the spectral levels of the 20 m El and 21.4 m E3 record were equivalent, suggesting that VACM current vectors recorded near the surface beneath a surface-following buoy do not contain detectable amounts of aliased high-frequency mooring motion.
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  • 54
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers, 27 (9). pp. 671-691.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-14
    Description: The maximum counterillumination intensities of three species of mesopelagic squids and one species of mesopelagic fish were determined in a shipboard laboratory. The values were compared with the intensity of downwelling irradiance in the ocean measured off Oahu, Hawaii. The upper depth limits of the mesopelagic fauna were determined by mid-day and moonlit-night trawling. The data support the hypothesis that limits on concealment from predation through counterillumination determine the upper depth limits of this fauna during the day. At night near full moon, however, animals may be found at light levels higher than those at which counterillumination seems to be an effective strategy.
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  • 55
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 26 (Suppl. 1). pp. 1-8.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
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  • 56
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 26 (Suppl. 1). pp. 161-189.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Horizontal velocity and temperature measurements observed from a two-dimensional array of moored instruments, mooring Fl, are analysed to describe the near-surface internal wave field in the GATE (GARP Atlantic Tropical Experiment) C-scale area. Spectral properties indicate strong deviations from the Garrett and Munk (1972, 1975) deep ocean internal wave models. The frequency spectrum in the upper pycnocline is dominated by three energetic bands centered at 0.0127 (inertial frequency), 0.08 (M2-tidal frequency) and 3 cph. The latter frequency band does not correspond to the local Brunt Väisälä frequency (〈 10 cph) and contains about one half of the total internal wave energy of fluctuations with periods less than 10 hours. Cross-spectral analysis of the high frequency internal waves yields corresponding wavelengths of order 1 km consistent with westward propagating first mode wave groups, if the effect of Doppler shift due to a strong mean current is taken into account
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  • 57
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    In:  In: The Gas Situation in the ECE Region Around the Year 1990: proceedings of an International Symposium of the Committee on Gas of the Economic Commission for Europe, held in Evian, France. Pergamon Press, Oxford, pp. 327-342. ISBN 0-08-024465-3
    Publication Date: 2016-09-12
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 58
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 27 (1). pp. 97-98.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Letter to the Editor
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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