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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2017. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Ecosphere 8 (2017): 10.1002/ecs2.2017, doi:10.1002/ecs2.2017.
    Description: Historically low temperatures have severely limited skeleton-breaking predation on the Antarctic shelf, facilitating the evolution of a benthic fauna poorly defended against durophagy. Now, rapid warming of the Southern Ocean is restructuring Antarctic marine ecosystems as conditions become favorable for range expansions. Populations of the lithodid crab Paralomis birsteini currently inhabit some areas of the continental slope off Antarctica. They could potentially expand along the slope and upward to the outer continental shelf, where temperatures are no longer prohibitively low. We identified two sites inhabited by different densities of lithodids in the slope environment along the western Antarctic Peninsula. Analysis of the gut contents of P. birsteini trapped on the slope revealed them to be opportunistic invertivores. The abundances of three commonly eaten, eurybathic taxa—ophiuroids, echinoids, and gastropods—were negatively associated with P. birsteini off Marguerite Bay, where lithodid densities averaged 4280 ind/km2 at depths of 1100–1499 m (range 3440–5010 ind/km2), but not off Anvers Island, where lithodid densities were lower, averaging 2060 ind/km2 at these depths (range 660–3270 ind/km2). Higher abundances of lithodids appear to exert a negative effect on invertebrate distribution on the slope. Lateral or vertical range expansions of P. birsteini at sufficient densities could substantially reduce populations of their benthic prey off Antarctica, potentially exacerbating the direct impacts of rising temperatures on the distribution and diversity of the contemporary shelf benthos.
    Description: Division of Polar Programs Grant Numbers: ANT-0838466, ANT-0838844, ANT-1141877, ANT-1141896; Vetenskapsrådet Grant Number: 824-2008-6429; H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Grant Number: 704895; U.S. National Science Foundation; European Commission; University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Keywords: Antarctica ; Bathyal ; Benthic ; Climate change ; Echinoidea ; Lithodidae ; Ophiuroidea ; Paralomis ; Polar emergence ; Predation
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Highlights • Deep-sea mineral exploration and exploitation licenses have been issued recently. • Mining will modify the abiotic and biotic environment. • At directly mined sites, species are removed and cannot resist disturbance. • Recovery is highly variable in distinct ecosystems and among benthic taxa. • Community changes may persist over geological time-scales at directly mined sites. Abstract With increasing demand for mineral resources, extraction of polymetallic sulphides at hydrothermal vents, cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts at seamounts, and polymetallic nodules on abyssal plains may be imminent. Here, we shortly introduce ecosystem characteristics of mining areas, report on recent mining developments, and identify potential stress and disturbances created by mining. We analyze species’ potential resistance to future mining and perform meta-analyses on population density and diversity recovery after disturbances most similar to mining: volcanic eruptions at vents, fisheries on seamounts, and experiments that mimic nodule mining on abyssal plains. We report wide variation in recovery rates among taxa, size, and mobility of fauna. While densities and diversities of some taxa can recover to or even exceed pre-disturbance levels, community composition remains affected after decades. The loss of hard substrata or alteration of substrata composition may cause substantial community shifts that persist over geological timescales at mined sites.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
    Format: other
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2018-12-17
    Description: Highlights: • Shallow-water and deep-sea holothurians avoided copper-contaminated sediment. • Shallow-water taxa may be suitable ecotoxicological proxies for deep-sea taxa. • Avoidance behaviour may have bioenergetic consequences. Abstract: Exploration of deep-sea mineral resources is burgeoning, raising concerns regarding ecotoxicological impacts on deep-sea fauna. Assessing toxicity in deep-sea species is technologically challenging, which promotes interest in establishing shallow-water ecotoxicological proxy species. However, the effects of temperature and hydrostatic pressure on toxicity, and how adaptation to deep-sea environmental conditions might moderate these effects, are unknown. To address these uncertainties we assessed behavioural and physiological (antioxidant enzyme activity) responses to exposure to copper-spiked artificial sediments in a laboratory experiment using a shallow-water holothurian (Holothuria forskali), and in an in situ experiment using a deep-sea holothurian (Amperima sp.). Both species demonstrated sustained avoidance behaviour, evading contact with contaminated artificial sediment. However, A. sp. demonstrated sustained avoidance of 5 mg l−1 copper-contaminated artificial sediment whereas H. forskali demonstrated only temporary avoidance of 5 mg l−1 copper-contaminated artificial sediment, suggesting that H. forskali may be more tolerant of metal exposure over 96 h. Nonetheless, the acute behavioural response appears consistent between the shallow-water species and the deep-sea species, suggesting that H. forskali may be a suitable ecotoxicological proxy for A. sp. in acute (≤24 h) exposures, which may be representative of deep-sea mining impacts. No antioxidant response was observed in either species, which was interpreted to be the consequence of avoiding copper exposure. Although these data suggest that shallow-water taxa may be suitable ecotoxicological proxies for deep-sea taxa, differences in methodological and analytical approaches, and in sex and reproductive stage of experimental subjects, require caution in assessing the suitability of H. forskali as an ecotoxicological proxy for A. sp. Nonetheless, avoidance behaviour may have bioenergetic consequences that affect growth and/or reproductive output, potentially impacting fecundity and/or offspring fitness, and thus influencing source-sink dynamics and persistence of wider deep-sea populations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2014-06-08
    Description: Background: Randomised trials provide evidence that patient decision aids improve outcomes with respect to patient knowledge, involvement and satisfaction in decision making. It is less clear how these complex interventions are implemented within patient-clinician interactions and which components are active for improving decision processes. To investigate the experiences of using a diabetes treatment decision aid and to explore how components within a complex intervention influenced the decision making process. Methods: A pragmatic mixed methods study nested within the PANDAs cluster randomised trial of a patient decision aid. Themes inductively derived from interviews and observation of consultations with further triangulation with results of decision quality and involvement measurements and case analyses. Results: The decision aid intervention was employed flexibly within the consultation with both the patient and clinician active in marshalling elements. The decision aid improved processing and organization of information needed for decision making within the consultation interaction. It also improved decision quality by preparing the patient for active involvement within the clinical consultation. Conclusion: The intervention was acceptable, flexible and readily implemented in primary care consultations. The decision aid was effective in facilitating cognitive processing. The intervention also facilitated rehearsal in preparation for active roles in a shared decision process.Trial registration: Trials Register Number: ISRCTN14842077. Date registered: 24.06.2010.
    Electronic ISSN: 1756-0500
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Published by BioMed Central
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2016-05-14
    Description: The connectivity of marine organisms among habitat patches has been dominated by two independent paradigms with distinct conservation strategies. One paradigm is the dispersal of larvae on ocean currents, which suggests networks of marine reserves. The other is the demersal migration of animals from nursery to adult habitats, requiring the conservation of connected ecosystem corridors. Here, we suggest that a common driver – wave exposure – links larval and demersal connectivity across the seascape. To study the effect of linked connectivities on fish abundance at reefs, we parameterize a demographic model for The Bahamas seascape using maps of habitats, empirically forced models of wave exposure and spatially realistic 3-dimensional hydrological models of larval dispersal. The integrated empirical-modeling approach enabled us to study linked-connectivity on a scale not currently possible by purely empirical studies. We find sheltered environments not only provide greater nursery habitat for juvenile fish but larvae spawned on adjacent reefs have higher retention, thereby creating a synergistic increase in fish abundance. Uniting connectivity paradigms to consider all life-stages simultaneously can help explain the evolution of nursery habitat use and simplifies conservation advice: reserves in sheltered environments have desirable characteristics for biodiversity conservation and can support local fisheries through adult spillover. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
    Print ISSN: 0012-9658
    Electronic ISSN: 1939-9170
    Topics: Biology
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: During Sonne cruise SO242-2 six enclosure corrals (30*30 cm) were deployed in undisturbed sediment at the southern reference site of the DISCOL experimental area using ROV Kiel 6000 (GEOMAR). Artificial sediment was incubated at 2°C in filtered seawater (sediment effect) or in filtered seawater spiked with copper (copper effect; 1, 5, 10, or 20 mg Cu L-1) for 72 h prior to deployment and subsequently added on top of the deep-sea sediment inside the corrals. After approx. 94h of in-situ incubation, push cores (7.4 cm inner diameter) were taken inside the corrals and sliced in different depth layers (artificial sediment layer, 0-1 cm, 1-2 cm and 2-5 cm). Samples were fixed in formaldehyde and meiofauna was analysed in the lab of the Marine Biology group at Ghent university.
    Keywords: Bivalvia; Copepoda; Core; Date/Time of event; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment, experiment; Depth, top/min; Depth comment; Elevation of event; Event label; Experimental treatment; Gastrotricha; Halacaroidea; Isopoda; JPI-OCEANS; JPI Oceans - Ecological Aspects of Deep-Sea Mining; JPIO-MiningImpact; Kinorhyncha; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Loricifera; Meiofauna, abundance; Nauplii; Nematoda; Ostracoda; Polychaeta; PUC; Push corer; SO242/2; SO242/2_196_PUC-10; SO242/2_196_PUC-18; SO242/2_196_PUC-20; SO242/2_196_PUC-24; SO242/2_196_PUC-49; SO242/2_196_PUC-52; SO242/2_196_PUC-53; SO242/2_196_PUC-57; SO242/2_196_PUC-58; SO242/2_196_PUC-61; SO242/2_196_PUC-63; SO242/2_196_PUC-65; SO242/2_196_PUC-67; SO242/2_196_PUC-74; SO242/2_196_PUC-79; SO242/2_196_PUC-80; SO242/2_196_PUC-83; SO242/2_196_PUC-9; Sonne_2; South Pacific Ocean, Peru Basin; Tanaidacea; Tantulocarida; Tardigrada; Thickness
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1365 data points
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