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  • 11
    Keywords: Multiple drivers ; native and non-native crab species ; larval stages ; North Sea and North Atlantic Ocean ; Hemigrapsus sanguineus ; Carcinus maenas ; Hemigrapsus takanoi ; Hochschulschrift
    Description / Table of Contents: Quantifying species responses to the effects of changing environmental conditions is critical for a better understanding of how climate change affects invasion, expansion, and contraction of marine coastal species. Climate change is leading to modifications in the marine coastal environment, to conditions not experienced before; climate change results in that marine organisms experience simultaneous changes in several environmental variables (=drivers: e.g. temperature, salinity, food). How simultaneous changes in multiple drivers are experienced depend on species-specific traits (e.g. physiological tolerance, developmental time); for instance, co-occurring native and non-native species may experience and respond to climate change in different ways. In addition, within species, responses to multiple drivers may vary across populations and environmental gradients. The general objective of this thesis was to quantify the effects of environmental drivers (temperature, salinity and food limitation) on performance of native and non-native species with focus on larval stages and using crabs as model systems. There were two main objectives, first to compare native and non-native species in the responses to multiple environmental drivers and to quantify larval responses to temperature across their distribution range. I focused on larvae because they play a critical role in population dynamics: larvae are important for the dispersion and connectivity of populations, and are more sensitive to changes in environmental conditions than adults. I used three ecologically relevant species of coastal areas of the North Sea and North Atlantic Ocean as models: Hemigrapsus sanguineus, Carcinus maenas and Hemigrapsus takanoi. C. maenas is native to Europe; Hemigrapsus spp. are both non-native species in the European coast, where they coexist with C. maenas as juveniles and adults in the benthos. I used factorial experiments rearing larvae from hatching to megalopae at different combinations of temperature and other environmental drivers (salinity, food limitation). Larval performance was quantified as survival, duration of development, and growth. The first series of result show that both non-native (Hemigrapsus spp) species had higher performance (high survival, shorter duration of development and high growth rates) than the native C. maenas at higher temperatures and at moderately low salinities (18 – 24 °C, 20 – 25 ‰). These results are comparable to another non-native species in Europe, the Chinese mitten crab Eriocheir sinensis. In H. sanguineus, larvae show moderate level of tolerance to limited access to food at high temperature, which contrasted to the low tolerance shown in native C. maenas. Experiments and modelling show that the nature of the multiple driver response depends strongly on the metric used to measure time, where my emphasis is on biological time (time to metamorphosis). The results from the populations comparisons showed species and gradient-specific responses. For H. takanoi, distributed over a salinity gradient (North Sea -Baltic Sea), larvae from the North Sea populations always showed higher survival and faster development compared with those from the Baltic Sea. The population near the limit of the distribution showed very low survival, suggesting that subsidies or complex ontogenetic migration patterns are needed for population persistence. Results did not show genetic differentiation among the studied populations in the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit one gene (COI) suggesting that there is high connectivity among populations. For C. maenas distributed across a latitudinal gradient (South: Vigo, Spain; North: Bergen and Trondheim, Norway) and reared under different temperatures (range 6 to 27 °C in steps of 3 °C), there was little variation in survival and growth among populations. However, larvae from the Norwegian populations had a slightly shorter duration of development at low temperatures than those from Vigo, this response has an adaptive value in that it could sustain survival in scenarios of reduced temperature, by shortening the larval phase, when mortality rates are high. Besides, results from this experiment (as well as for the mentioned above) showed high intrapopulation variability in larval performance which has a potential to affect range expansion of the above-mentioned species. Variation in the responses of larval stages to the effects of different environmental drivers highlights the importance of using physiological descriptors to quantify the performance of marine invertebrates to changing environments. Larval responses vary in rates of survival but also in the duration of time to achieve metamorphosis, as well as the rate at which the organisms grow, with concomitant effects on post-metamorphic success, which in seasonal habitats may strongly depend on temperature. The results from the thesis highlight the importance of quantifying the responses of marine invertebrates to changing environmental conditions, considering different species and species distributed across different gradients as well as variations among and within species.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (VI, 193 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Language: English
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  • 12
    Keywords: ocean modelling ; ocean circulation ; climate change ; climate modeling ; oceanography ; Hochschulschrift
    Description / Table of Contents: State-of-the-art climate models and computing infrastructure are now able to resolve mesoscale ocean eddy activity in many contexts. However, in computationally intensive model applications, such as the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) or simulations of the high latitudes, grid resolutions largely remain eddy-parameterizing due to resource constraints. These missing mesoscale processes are understood to be crucial drivers of ocean circulation and climate and may become still more relevant in the context of anthropogenic climate change. To overcome the computational limitations of traditional models, multiscale modeling strategies have been developed which can distribute grid resolution and resources based on resolution requirements and research goals. Here, several strategies for resolving the mesoscale using multiscale methods are described and the results of their implementation with the Finite volumE Sea ice Ocean Model (FESOM) are reported. In the first application, FESOM participates in CMIP6 with the strategy of concentrating computational resources on the major eddy-rich regions of the ocean. The resulting simulations are able to reproduce between 51 and 82% of observed eddy kinetic energy (EKE) in each region and project substantial climate change impacts on mesoscale activity for the first time at such a scale. The results include a poleward shift of eddy activity in most western boundary currents; EKE intensification in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), Brazil and Malvinas Currents, and Kuroshio Current; EKE decline in the Gulf Stream; and intensification of Agulhas leakage. In a second application, FESOM is used to concentrate computational resources in the Southern Ocean and cost-reducing modeling strategies are used to enable fully eddy-resolving climate change projections with the regionally focused grid. The simulations faithfully reproduce EKE in the Southern Ocean and project intensified eddy activity in line with the CMIP6 analysis. The climate change signal is difficult to reliably discern from natural variability after 1 °C of warming, but becomes clear after 4 °C. Finally, the high-resolution Southern Ocean simulations are used to investigate high-latitude eddy activity where ice cover and low eddy size make observations and traditional modeling methods difficult. Detailed, near circumpolar mesoscale activity is detected and related to gyre circulation, the Antarctic Slope Current, and bathymetry. There is a strong seasonal cycle which suppresses winter eddy activity at the surface and selectively dampens cyclonic eddies. After prolonged anthropogenic warming, broad intensification of eddy activity occurs alongside regional decline, ACC eddy activity encroaches further into the high latitudes, and the seasonal cycle is diminished. Collectively, this work demonstrates the effectiveness of multiscale modeling in reducing the cost of resolving mesoscale ocean activity, facilitating the study of eddy activity and its interactions with the broader climate in previously unachievable contexts.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (v, 124 Blätter) , Illustrationen
    Language: English
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  • 13
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (39 Seiten = 3 MB) , Illustrationen, Graphen
    Edition: 2024
    Language: German
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  • 14
    Keywords: Prejudices ; Discrimination ; Racism ; Discrimination in criminal justice administration ; Discrimination in education ; Criminal justice, Administration of ; Stereotypes (Social psychology) ; Criminal law ; Bias ; Prejudice ; Social Discrimination ; Criminal Law ; Interpersonal Relations ; Stereotyping ; Vorurteil ; Diskriminierung ; Rassismus
    Description / Table of Contents: What meets the eye --Seeing each other --Nurturing bias --Where we find ourselves --A bad dude -- Male black --How free people think --The scary monster --The way out --The comfort of home --Hard lessons --Higher learning --The bottom line.
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 348 pages , illustrations , 21 cm
    ISBN: 9780735224957 , 0735224951
    DDC: 303.3/85
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: "First published in the United States of America by Viking, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, 2019"--Title page verso , Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-333) and index
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  • 15
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland | Cham : Imprint: Springer
    Keywords: Geophysics. ; Water. ; Hydrology. ; Geotechnical engineering.
    Description / Table of Contents: Fish swimming performance: effect of flume length and different fatigue definitions -- Discharge capacity of an improved form of labyrinth weir -- Application of Animal Movement Models to Acoustic Telemetry Positioning -- A Lagrangian analysis of the surface flow in a jet dissipation basin at equilibrium -- Hydrodynamics of fish-shaped rigid bodies: velocity-drag coupling -- Methods for the assessment of fishways (upstream fish passage) -- Fish observations and hydraulic measurements on a nature-like unstructured block ramp -- Applying hidden Markov modelling to fine-scale telemetry -- Consider the bigger picture: The effect of multimodal sensory integration on fish passage behaviour -- Flood routing using models based on input and output flow or stage data.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XIII, 407 p. 160 illus., 137 illus. in color.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2024.
    ISBN: 9783031560934
    Series Statement: GeoPlanet: Earth and Planetary Sciences
    Language: English
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  • 16
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Singapore : Springer Nature Singapore | Singapore : Imprint: Springer
    Keywords: Natural disasters. ; Water. ; Hydrology. ; Geology. ; Geomorphology. ; Physical geography.
    Description / Table of Contents: Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Flood Exposure in Bangladesh A GIS and Remote Sensing-based Approach -- Analyzing spatiotemporal changes in flood risk zones to mitigate flood hazards in a floodplain area using a GIS-based AHP technique -- Mapping of glacial lakes and glacial lake outburst flood in Lahul and Spiti district using remote sensing and GIS -- Mapping flood susceptibility and risk in the Ganges Tidal Floodplain utilizing a Weighted Factor Analysis Model -- Assessment of flood vulnerability in Vedganga river basin spread over Maharashtra.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XXI, 472 p. 186 illus., 169 illus. in color.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2024.
    ISBN: 9789819726882
    Series Statement: Springer Natural Hazards
    Language: English
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