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  • Journals
  • OceanRep  (66)
  • 2000-2004  (66)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-08-18
    Description: Joint IAMSLIC/EURASLIC Conference held 14-19 October, 2001 at Brest, France
    Type: Proceedings , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-07-25
    Type: Proceedings , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-01-19
    Description: Commercially exploited stocks that have experienced declines in population abundance have responded by altering life history traits of growth and maturation. Cod is not only becoming mature at an earlier age but also, the majority of the stock comprises fishes with no previous spawning experience. Actual fisheries management does not take in account qualitative differences within the spawning stock. If the stock responds to continued exploitation by shifting maturity to an earlier stage, fish will spawn at smaller sizes. They will produce smaller eggs, and consequently small and less viable larvae, so that the contribution to the spawning stock biomass will be less than expected. There are many advantages for delaying maturation: Larger and heavier fish will be better conditioned for spawning, have higher fecundity and larger eggs that are more viable. Harvesting at delayed recruitment enables the stock to maintain a larger SSB with an expanded age structure while supporting a sustainable fishery.
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    IUCN
    In:  In: Elasmobranch biodiversity, conservation and management: proceedings of the international seminar and workshop. , ed. by Fowler, S. L., Reed, T. M. and Dipper, F. A. Occasional Paper of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, 25 . IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, pp. 82-85. ISBN 2-8317-0650-5
    Publication Date: 2020-03-30
    Description: An annotated checklist of the sharks and rays of the South China Sea is described, together with some global statistics on the status and use of elasmobranchs. For each of the 156 recorded species, the checklist contains scientific names, synonyms, common names, global distribution, distribution in the area, status of threat, human uses, key references on taxonomy, identification, reproduction, population dynamics, and a list of people who have contributed information. The checklist is a direct printout from FishBase, a global database on finfish, developed at ICLARM in collaboration with FAO, the California Academy of Sciences, and many other partners, and supported by the European Commission (see www.fishbase.org). The goal of FishBase is to further the conservation and sustainable use of fish by bringing together the knowledge of taxonomists, fisheries experts, and conservationists, providing tools for analysing and updating this knowledge, and making it available to concerned people. How a closer link between FishBase, taxonomists and country experts can benefit the specialists, as well as elasmobranch conservation, is discussed
    Type: Book chapter , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-08-18
    Description: 28th Annual Conference of IAMSLIC held 6-11 October, 2002 at Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico
    Type: Proceedings , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    IGBP
    In:  Global Change Newsletter, 56 . pp. 19-23.
    Publication Date: 2018-10-10
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-05-31
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-07-17
    Description: Over the past decade large carbonate mound structures, situated in several provinces along the European continental margin have been discovered in 600 to 1200 m water depths. These structures appear as single, conical or ridge-like features, which are often colonised by a deep-water coral ecosystem. Cold-water corals Lophelia pertusa and Madrepora oculata dominate the coral community. Associated sessile and vagile fauna, like sponges, soft corals, bivalves, gastrodpods, crinoids, brachiopods, and fish make these bioherms as diverse as their tropical counterparts. The objective of this study is to reconstruct past environmental settings locked in the sediments of a carbonate mound in the northern Porcupine Seabight, west off Ireland. Detailed investigations were concentrated on seven 3.5 to 6 m long sediment cores, retrieved from Propeller Mound and its closer vicinity. This mound is a ~150 m high structure within the Hovland Mound province, a cluster of several sea-floor protruding carbonate mounds. A first detailed analysis on benthic foraminiferal assemblages in the vicinity of a carbonate mound was performed on two sediment cores, one located on top of the mound and a second one from an off-mound position further north as control site. The off-mound samples reveal two different assemblages: (1) an Interglacial group dominated by infaunal species reflecting present-day environmental and oceanographic conditions with high nutrient flux to the sea-floor and low sediment accumulation under a strong hydrodynamic regime, and (2) a Glacial group, dominated by cassidulinid species, which describe an influence of polar conditions with low nutrient supply and cold intermediate waters. A single species, Elphidium excavatum, dominates the lower core section and is described here as a species displaced from shallow shelf areas. This removal of sediments from the shelf is related to a first advance of the Irish Ice Sheet onto the Irish Mainland shelf, inducing high sedimentation rates of ~28 cm/kyr with a coeval sea-level drop of ~50 m during Late Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3. Due to an incomplete stratigraphic record in the on-mound core, the same species of the off-mound assemblages have been grouped in on-mound samples. The results indicate a dominance of the Interglacial group, whereas the Glacial group is less abundant throughout the entire core. This pattern indicates the lack of glacial time intervals in the on-mound core, which is coherent with stable oxygen isotope data and U/Th dates on coral fragments, presenting only interglacial/-stadial values and ages. A third assemblage is abundant in samples of the on-mound core showing elevated epibenthic species not occurring in offmound samples or only to a minor degree. This Mound group shows a great affinity to strong currents, high nutrient availability and is supposed to indicate Mediterranean Outflow Water in the northern Porcupine Seabight, as well as a higher coral cover on Propeller Mound in an earlier interglacial period. A Late Pleistocene decline in mound growth for Propeller Mound is suggested by a decrease of the Mound group towards the Holocene, which might face its complete burial in the future as this already happened to the buried mounds of the Magellan Mound province further north. Detailed information on off-mound sediment structures and contents from visual core description and the interpretation of Computer Tomographic images were used to evaluate sedimentary processes in glacial and interglacial periods. The sediments portray the depositional history of the past ~31 kyr BP, mainly controlled by sea-level fluctuations and the climate regime with the advance and retreat of the Irish Ice Sheet onto the Irish Mainland Shelf. A first advance of glaciers is indicated by a turbiditic release slightly older than 31 kyr BP, coherent with Heinrich event 3. During MIS 3 and MIS 2 shelf erosion prevailed with abundant gravity flows and turbidity currents. A change from glaciomarine to hemipelagic contourite sedimentation during the onset of the Holocene indicates the establishment of the strong, present-day hydrodynamic regime at intermediate depths. A general decrease in sediment accumulation with decreasing distance towards Propeller Mound was discovered throughout the entire core sections. This suggests that currents (turbidity currents, gravity flows, bottom currents) have had a strong impact on sediment accumulation at the mound base for the past ~31 kyr BP. Finally, the reconstructed environmental setting deduced from sedimentary and micropaleontological analyses portrays the boundary conditions of the habitable range for the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa. The growth of this ecosystem occurs during interglacial and interstadial periods, whereas a glacial retreat of corals is documented in the absence of glacial sediments in the onmound core. These conclusions are summarised in a model – the Mound Factory – which efficiently accounts for the moundd development covering the period of the Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (past 3.1–2.5 Ma).
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-04-11
    Description: Given the variability of seasonal, annual, and in particular langer time-scales, the dispersal and fate of the river discharge and its influence on the hydrographical and sedimentological settings are the central tasks in understanding the Holocene history of the Laptev Sea shelf. The main goal of this study was to investigate short- and long-term environmental changes in the strongly coupled land-shelf system of the Laptev Sea using isotopic evidence in sediments and biogenic carbonates. In order to trace the modern spatial distribution of terrestrial organic matter, which is strongly affected by the riverine input and the thermal erosion of the ice-rich permafrost coast, stable carbon isotope ratios of total organic carbon in surface sediments were analyzed. The stable carbon isotope composition of surface sediments reveal a dominant impact of terrestrial organic matter on the modern depositional environment of the Laptev Sea shelf with distinct south to north and east to west gradients. Based on downcore 8 13Carg records in radiocarbon-dated sediment cores the spatial and temporal deposition of terrestrial organic matter during the past 12.7 ka is specified and can be related to depositional changes which occurred after the last glacial maximum when this region became flooded due to a global rising sea level. The major changes in the deposition of terrestrial organic matter occurred between 11 and 7 ka BP and comprise the main phase of the southward retreat of the coastline and river depocenters due to the postglacial sea level rise. Stable oxygen and carbon isotope profiles from recent and fossil bivalve shells were investigated in order to trace modern and past hydrographical conditions and their changes during the postglacial history of the Laptev Sea. The serial dissection of bivalve shell valves along their growth axis from the umbo towards the ventral margin provides an isotopic record of hydrographical and physiological changes during the life of the individual specimen. The oxygen isotopic profiles of modern bivalve species of Astarte borealis exhibit amplitude cycles interpreted as recording annual hydrographical cycles. Regarding the well-known relationship between the carbonate 8 180, temperature, and the isotopic composition of water (8180w), it is possible to relate isotopic phases to seasonal hydrographical phases like summer and winter. The within shell isotopic variations are mainly attributed to variations in the isotopic composition and in the salinity of bottom waters in the Laptev Sea. Seasonal temperature changes can be regarded of minor importance. Using a modern linear relationship between 8 180w and salinity of 0.50 %0/salinity, salinity records are reconstructed from the oxygen isotope records of the bivalve shells and can be directly compared with hydrographical parameters at the investigated sites. Carbon isotope profiles from modern specimens reveal a correspondence to the river breakup and to seasonal phytoplankton productivity. Trends towards lighter 8 13 C values through ontogeny suggest the effects of metabolic changes from a juvenile into a mature adult. Differences in the 8 13C of shell carbonate between the sites appear to reflect the regional distribution of the ö 13C of sedimentary organic matter. Given a good conformance between isotope profiles from modern bivalve shells and oceanographic observations, oxygen isotope profiles of radiocarbon bivalve shells from a sediment core from northeast off the Lena Delta are usecl to obtain in formation about passt hydrological conditions. Although isotope profiles from fossil bivalves of the Laptev Sea shelf reflect only a brief interval of time, they may offer new important insights into the paleohydrography during snapshots of the last 8.4 ka and their relation to the Holocene transgression. A reconstructed bottom water salinity of 29.5 at 8.4 ka BP indicates that the particular site was much more affectecl by riverine water than nowaclays causecl by the proximity to the coastline and to the paleo-1iver mouth. Due to the continuing southward retreat of the coastline ancl the Lena River mouth relative to the study site an increase in the bottom water salinity at 7.3 ka BP is reconstructecl. The oxygen isotope shell profile at 7.3 ka BP gives an evidence of a bottom water hydrography which is characterized by a high variability of summer and winter conditions on the level of modern bottom water conditions. The following time slices at 3.6 ka and 1.6 ka BP reveal that modern hydrological conditions are fully established. The presented salinity reconstruction enables us to make further presurnptions on the relative proximity of the study site to the coast and to the river rnouth during snapshot views of the Holocene history and thus can be related to the postglacial transgression of the Laptev Sea shelf.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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