12 results on '"Mittermayer, Felix"'
Search Results
2. Development and operation of a novel non-invasive optoacoustic underwater fish observatory in Kiel Bight, Southwestern Baltic Sea.
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Gröger, Joachim P., Cisewski, Boris, Badri-Hoeher, Sabah, Böer, Gordon, Boos, Karin, Clemmesen, Catriona, Cojocaru, Ala, Dauben, Verena, Hoeher, Peter A., Lehmann, Andreas, Matz, Sebastian, Mehrtens, Hela, Mittermayer, Felix, Renkewitz, Helge, Schramm, Hauke, Strickmann, Tobias, Westphalen, Jonni, Wilts, Thomas, Winkler, Julian, and Wolf, Dennis
- Subjects
OPTICAL scanners ,HYBRID systems ,SONAR imaging ,FISH populations ,CLASSIFICATION of fish - Abstract
This study presents a trilateral test array of new opto-acoustic Underwater Fish Observatories (UFOs) that were operated and tested in Kiel Bight as part of the “UFOTriNet” project. While hydroacoustic and optical techniques have so far been used individually to observe and monitor fish stocks, we present a coupled hybrid system consisting of an optical device intended to scan the near-field as a subsample of a spatially larger medium-to-far-field, scanned by an acoustical device. The optical device consists of two residual light amplifying camera modules able to detect and classify various marine species at a high resolution in the range of at max 4 meters in the study area. To compensate for this spatial limitation, the acoustical component consists of a 2D imaging sonar with a maximum range of 50 m, albeit with a lower resolution. Species affiliation, morphometric characteristics of fish and other marine organisms were stereo-optically detected and classified in the nearfield, blended with acoustical activity in medium to far range, and projected onto the entire insonified area using a hybrid algorithm. Through the synchronous acquisition of multiparametric abiotic and biotic data, UFO allows an automatic, continuous, and non-invasive long-term monitoring of various fish and other marine species and their habitats at regional hotspots. An 86-day multiparametric sample revealing an abrupt shift from a clupeid fish to a gelatinous plankton dominated regime in summer/autumn 2021 in Kiel Fjord is used to demonstrate the potential of UFO for various applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Pilot study to investigate the effect of long-term exposure to high pCO2 on adult cod (Gadus morhua) otolith morphology and calcium carbonate deposition
- Author
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Coll-Lladó, Clara, Mittermayer, Felix, Webb, Paul Brian, Allison, Nicola, Clemmesen, Catriona, Stiasny, Martina, Bridges, Christopher Robert, Göttler, Gwendolin, and Garcia de la serrana, Daniel
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- 2021
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4. A Deep-Learning Based Pipeline for Estimating the Abundance and Size of Aquatic Organisms in an Unconstrained Underwater Environment from Continuously Captured Stereo Video.
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Böer, Gordon, Gröger, Joachim Paul, Badri-Höher, Sabah, Cisewski, Boris, Renkewitz, Helge, Mittermayer, Felix, Strickmann, Tobias, and Schramm, Hauke
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UNDERWATER cameras ,AQUATIC organisms ,STEREOSCOPIC cameras ,MARINE animals ,MARINE organisms ,SONAR - Abstract
The utilization of stationary underwater cameras is a modern and well-adapted approach to provide a continuous and cost-effective long-term solution to monitor underwater habitats of particular interest. A common goal of such monitoring systems is to gain better insight into the dynamics and condition of populations of various marine organisms, such as migratory or commercially relevant fish taxa. This paper describes a complete processing pipeline to automatically determine the abundance, type and estimate the size of biological taxa from stereoscopic video data captured by the stereo camera of a stationary Underwater Fish Observatory (UFO). A calibration of the recording system was carried out in situ and, afterward, validated using the synchronously recorded sonar data. The video data were recorded continuously for nearly one year in the Kiel Fjord, an inlet of the Baltic Sea in northern Germany. It shows underwater organisms in their natural behavior, as passive low-light cameras were used instead of active lighting to dampen attraction effects and allow for the least invasive recording possible. The recorded raw data are pre-filtered by an adaptive background estimation to extract sequences with activity, which are then processed by a deep detection network, i.e., Yolov5. This provides the location and type of organisms detected in each video frame of both cameras, which are used to calculate stereo correspondences following a basic matching scheme. In a subsequent step, the size and distance of the depicted organisms are approximated using the corner coordinates of the matched bounding boxes. The Yolov5 model employed in this study was trained on a novel dataset comprising 73,144 images and 92,899 bounding box annotations for 10 categories of marine animals. The model achieved a mean detection accuracy of 92.4%, a mean average precision (mAP) of 94.8% and an F1 score of 93%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Caught in the middle: bottom-up and top-down processes impacting recruitment in a small pelagic fish.
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Moyano, Marta, Illing, Björn, Akimova, Anna, Alter, Katharina, Bartolino, Valerio, Börner, Gregor, Clemmesen, Catriona, Finke, Annegret, Gröhsler, Tomas, Kotterba, Paul, Livdane, Lina, Mittermayer, Felix, Moll, Dorothee, von Nordheim, Lena, Peck, Myron A., Schaber, Matthias, and Polte, Patrick
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PELAGIC fishes ,ATLANTIC herring ,CLIMATE extremes ,FISHERY sciences ,LABOR mobility ,LIFE cycle costing ,FISH populations - Abstract
Understanding the drivers behind fluctuations in fish populations remains a key objective in fishery science. Our predictive capacity to explain these fluctuations is still relatively low, due to the amalgam of interacting bottom-up and top-down factors, which vary across time and space among and within populations. Gaining a mechanistic understanding of these recruitment drivers requires a holistic approach, combining field, experimental and modelling efforts. Here, we use the Western Baltic Spring-Spawning (WBSS) herring (Clupea harengus) to exemplify the power of this holistic approach and the high complexity of the recruitment drivers (and their interactions). Since the early 2000s, low recruitment levels have promoted intense research on this stock. Our literature synthesis suggests that the major drivers are habitat compression of the spawning beds (due to eutrophication and coastal modification mainly) and warming, which indirectly leads to changes in spawning phenology, prey abundance and predation pressure. Other factors include increased intensity of extreme climate events and new predators in the system. Four main knowledge gaps were identified related to life-cycle migration and habitat use, population structure and demographics, life-stage specific impact of multi-stressors, and predator–prey interactions. Specific research topics within these areas are proposed, as well as the priority to support a sustainable management of the stock. Given that the Baltic Sea is severely impacted by warming, eutrophication and altered precipitation, WBSS herring could be a harbinger of potential effects of changing environmental drivers to the recruitment of small pelagic fishes in other coastal areas in the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Pilot study to investigate the effect of long-term exposure to high pCO2 on adult cod (Gadus morhua) otolith morphology and calcium carbonate deposition.
- Author
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Coll-Lladó, Clara, Mittermayer, Felix, Webb, Paul Brian, Allison, Nicola, Clemmesen, Catriona, Stiasny, Martina, Bridges, Christopher Robert, Göttler, Gwendolin, and Garcia de la serrana, Daniel
- Abstract
To date the study of ocean acidification on fish otolith formation has been mainly focused on larval and juvenile stages. In the present pilot study, wild-captured adult Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) were exposed to two different levels of pCO
2, 422µatm (ambient, low pCO2 ) or 1091µatm (high pCO2 ), for a period of 30 weeks (from mid-October to early April 2014–2015) in order to study the effects on otolith size, shape and CaCO3 crystallization amongst other biological parameters. We found that otoliths from cod exposed to high pCO2 were slightly smaller (− 3.4% in length; − 3.3% in perimeter), rounder (− 2.9% circularity and + 4% roundness) but heavier (+ 5%) than the low pCO2 group. Interestingly, there were different effects in males and females; for instance, male cods exposed to high pCO2 exhibited significant changes in circularity (− 3%) and roundness (+ 4%) compared to the low pCO2 males, but without significant changes on otolith dimensions, while females exposed to high pCO2 had smaller otoliths as shown for length (− 5.6%), width (− 2%), perimeter (− 3.5%) and area (− 4.8%). Furthermore, while the majority of the otoliths analysed showed normal aragonite deposition, 10% of fish exposed to 1091µatm of pCO2 had an abnormal accretion of calcite, suggesting a shift on calcium carbonate polymorph crystallization in some individuals under high pCO2 conditions. Our preliminary results indicate that high levels of pCO2 in adult Atlantic cod might affect otolith growth in a gender-specific way. Our findings reveal that otoliths from adult cod are affected by ocean acidification, and we believe that the present study will prompt further research into this currently under-explored area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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7. Divergent responses of Atlantic cod to ocean acidification and food limitation.
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Stiasny, Martina H., Sswat, Michael, Mittermayer, Felix H., Falk‐Petersen, Inger‐Britt, Schnell, Nalani K., Puvanendran, Velmurugu, Mortensen, Atle, Reusch, Thorsten B. H., and Clemmesen, Catriona
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ATLANTIC cod ,OCEAN acidification ,FISH larvae ,CARBON dioxide ,FISH growth ,GILLS - Abstract
In order to understand the effect of global change on marine fishes, it is imperative to quantify the effects on fundamental parameters such as survival and growth. Larval survival and recruitment of the Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) were found to be heavily impaired by end‐of‐century levels of ocean acidification. Here, we analysed larval growth among 35–36 days old surviving larvae, along with organ development and ossification of the skeleton. We combined CO2 treatments (ambient: 503 µatm, elevated: 1,179 µatm) with food availability in order to evaluate the effect of energy limitation in addition to the ocean acidification stressor. As expected, larval size (as a proxy for growth) and skeletogenesis were positively affected by high food availability. We found significant interactions between acidification and food availability. Larvae fed ad libitum showed little difference in growth and skeletogenesis due to the CO2 treatment. Larvae under energy limitation were significantly larger and had further developed skeletal structures in the elevated CO2 treatment compared to the ambient CO2 treatment. However, the elevated CO2 group revealed impairments in critically important organs, such as the liver, and had comparatively smaller functional gills indicating a mismatch between size and function. It is therefore likely that individual larvae that had survived acidification treatments will suffer from impairments later during ontogeny. Our study highlights important allocation trade‐off between growth and organ development, which is critically important to interpret acidification effects on early life stages of fish. Effects of elevated CO2 treatments (ambient: 503 µatm, elevated: 1,179 µatm) and differences in food availability on cod larval growth, skeletogenesis (vertebrate ossification) and gill development were analysed. Larvae fed ad libitum showed little difference in growth and skeletogenesis due to the CO2 treatment, but larvae under energy limitation were significantly larger and had further developed skeletal structures in the elevated CO2 treatment. However, the elevated CO2 group had comparatively smaller functional gills indicating a mismatch between size and function and a trade‐off between growth and organ development, which is critically important to interpret acidification effects on early life stages of fish. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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8. The molecular background of the aspartate aminotransferase polymorphism in Littorina snails maintained by strong selection on small spatial scales.
- Author
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Mittermayer, Felix, Helmerson, Cecilia, Duvetorp, Mårten, Johannesson, Kerstin, and Panova, Marina
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ASPARTATE aminotransferase , *ENZYME regulation , *SNAILS , *ISOENZYMES , *AMINO acid sequence , *CONOTOXINS , *MALATE dehydrogenase - Abstract
• DNA variation is characterized for aspartate aminotransferase allozymes in snails. • Allozyme alleles differ by 2–4 substitutions. • Aspartate aminotransferase is expressed in the snail at the constant level. • Aspartate aminotransferase gene is present in the snail genome in multiple copies. Allozymes present several classical examples of divergent selection, including the variation in the cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase (AAT) in the intertidal snails Littorina saxatilis. AAT is a part of the asparate-malate shuttle, in the interidal molluscs involved in the anaerobic respiration during desiccation. Previous allozyme studies reported the sharp gradient in the frequencies of the AAT100and the AAT120 alleles between the low and high shores in the Northern Europe and the differences in their enzymatic activity, supporting the role of AAT in adaptation to desiccation. However, the populations in the Iberian Peninsula showed the opposite allele cline. Using the mRNA sequencing and the genome pool-seq analyses we characterize DNA sequences of the different AAT alleles, report the amino acid replacements behind the allozyme variation and show that same allozyme alleles in Northern and Southern populations have different protein sequences. Gene phylogeny reveals that the AAT100 and the northern AAT120 alleles represent the old polymorphism, shared among the closely related species of Littorina, while the southern AAT120 allele is more recently derived from AAT100. Further, we show that the Aat gene is expressed at constitutive level in different genotypes and conditions, supporting the role of structural variation in regulation of enzyme activity. Finally, we report the location and the structure of the gene in the L. saxatilis genome and the presence of two additional non-functional gene copies. Altogether, we provide a missing link between the classical allozyme studies and the genome scans and bring together the results produced over decades of the genetic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Ocean Acidification Effects on Atlantic Cod Larval Survival and Recruitment to the Fished Population.
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Stiasny, Martina H., Mittermayer, Felix H., Sswat, Michael, Voss, Rüdiger, Jutfelt, Fredrik, Chierici, Melissa, Puvanendran, Velmurugu, Mortensen, Atle, Reusch, Thorsten B. H., and Clemmesen, Catriona
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ATLANTIC cod , *FISH larvae , *OCEAN acidification , *FISH populations , *EFFECT of global warming on fishes , *FISH physiology - Abstract
How fisheries will be impacted by climate change is far from understood. While some fish populations may be able to escape global warming via range shifts, they cannot escape ocean acidification (OA), an inevitable consequence of the dissolution of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in marine waters. How ocean acidification affects population dynamics of commercially important fish species is critical for adapting management practices of exploited fish populations. Ocean acidification has been shown to impair fish larvae’s sensory abilities, affect the morphology of otoliths, cause tissue damage and cause behavioural changes. Here, we obtain first experimental mortality estimates for Atlantic cod larvae under OA and incorporate these effects into recruitment models. End-of-century levels of ocean acidification (~1100 μatm according to the IPCC RCP 8.5) resulted in a doubling of daily mortality rates compared to present-day CO2 concentrations during the first 25 days post hatching (dph), a critical phase for population recruitment. These results were consistent under different feeding regimes, stocking densities and in two cod populations (Western Baltic and Barents Sea stock). When mortality data were included into Ricker-type stock-recruitment models, recruitment was reduced to an average of 8 and 24% of current recruitment for the two populations, respectively. Our results highlight the importance of including vulnerable early life stages when addressing effects of climate change on fish stocks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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10. Growth and maturity of sprat (Sprattus sprattus) in the Kattegat and Skagerrak, eastern North Sea.
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VITALE, Francesca, MITTERMAYER, Felix, KRISCHANSSON, Birgitta, JOHANSSON, Marianne, and CASINI, Michele
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SPRAT , *FISHERY management , *DEVELOPMENTAL biology - Abstract
Information on fish biology, as growth and reproduction, is an essential first step for a sound assessment and management of a fishery resource. Here we analyzed the annual cycle of body condition factor (K), gonadosomatic index (GSI) and maturity of sprat from the Skagerrak and Kattegat as well as from the Skagerrak inner fjords (Uddevalla fjords). The results show an inverse yearly pattern for K and GSI in both areas, K being the highest in autumn and lowest in spring, while the GSI index was highest in spring and lowest in autumn. The annual highest proportion of spawning fish was recorded from May to July, indicating the late spring and early summer as the main spawning period for sprat in these areas. Male sprat reached maturity at a higher size in the Uddevalla fjords compared to Skagerrak and Kattegat, while negligible differences were shown by females. The K, GSI and size-at-age were the lowest in the Uddevalla fjords, while K and GSI were the highest in the Skagerrak, potentially related to the different environmental conditions encountered in the different areas. All in all the present results furnish important information about the biology of the sprat in the area that is highly relevant in stock assessment and management. The potentiality for the sprat inhabiting the Uddevalla fjords to be a different sub-population should be addressed through further investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Early arrival of spring‐spawning Atlantic herring Clupea harengus at their spawning ground in the Kiel Fjord, western Baltic, relates to increasing winter seawater temperature.
- Author
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Ory, Nicolas C., Gröger, Joachim P., Lehmann, Andreas, Mittermayer, Felix, Neuheimer, Anna B., and Clemmesen, Catriona
- Abstract
The disturbance of marine organism phenology due to climate change and the subsequent effects on recruitment success are still poorly understood, especially in migratory fish species, such as the Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus; Clupeidae). Here we used the commercial catch data from a local fisher over a 50‐year period (1971–2020) to estimate western Baltic spring‐spawning (WBSS) herring mean arrival time Q50 (i.e., the week when 50% of the total fish catches had been made) at their spawning ground within the Kiel Fjord, southwest Baltic Sea, and the duration of the spawning season for each year. The relationship between the seawater temperature in the Kiel Bight and other environmental parameters (such as water salinity, North Atlantic and Atlantic multidecadal oscillations) and Q50 was evaluated using a general linear model to test the hypothesis that fish arrived earlier after warm than cold winters. We also estimated the accumulated thermal time to Q50 during gonadal development to estimate the effects of seawater temperature on the variations of Q50. The results of this study revealed a dramatic decrease in herring catches within the Kiel Fjord since the mid‐1990s, as documented for the whole southwestern Baltic Sea. Warmer winter seawater temperature was the only factor related to an earlier arrival (1 week for one January seawater temperature degree increase) of herring at their spawning ground. The relationship was found for the first time on week 52 of the year prior to spawning and was the strongest (50% of the variability explained) from the fourth week of January (8 weeks before the mean Q50 among the studied years). A thermal constant to Q50 (~316°C day) was found when temperatures were integrated from the 49th week of the year prior to spawning. These results indicate that seawater temperature enhanced the speed of gonadal maturation during the latest phases of gametogenesis, leading to an early fish arrival under warm conditions. The duration of the spawning season was elongated during warmer years, therefore potentially mitigating the effects of trophic mismatch when fish spawn early. The results of this study highlight the altering effects of climate change on the spawning activity of a migratory fish species in the Baltic Sea where fast global changes presage that in other coastal areas worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. How to curate and exhibit various types of physical samples using FAIR principles.
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Maicher, Doris, Mittermayer, Felix, Springer, Pina, and Süling, Jörg
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SCIENTIFIC community , *MARINE sciences , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *RESEARCH vessels , *DATA libraries , *NAVAL architecture , *NETWORK hubs - Abstract
In a modern research environment, physical samples are often treated as a burden, to be stored and forgotten but when their existence is digitalised and connected to the underlying metadata it becomes a great resource for present and future generations of researchers. This value is further expanded if the information is easily accessible for the research community, particular by offering intelligent search options, interconnection, extraction of data files etc.GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research has accumulated thousands of biological and geological samples, collected mainly during marine expeditions but also from time series and experiments. Samples date back as far as 1964. Today, the biological collection comprises roughly 180.000 samples (mainly fish and plankton) in formaldehyde as well as a large amount of cryofrozen materials. The core and rock repository holds a collection of about 4000 sediment cores totaling 30.000 core sections and more than 5000 boxes with hard rock samples and refined sample specimens. We have set ourselves the task to curate all these materials and connect them with sufficient metadata in order to make them searchable and, more importantly, findable.The Ocean Science Information System at GEOMAR (OSIS) joins all kind of data resulting from the institute's sea-going expeditions and land-based projects. It is designed for data exchange in the context of these expeditions and experiments, and during a research project's moratorium it supports scientists in documenting provenance of their research data and ultimately their publication. OSIS also serves as a hub for detailed information, metadata and references to peer-review journal publications. The metadata in OSIS are publicly accessible and the system is interlinked to the institutional repository OceanRep as well as several other data archives and databases. It will act as a first entry point for scientists to identify samples by their metadata even before contacting the appropriate curator to inquire sample accessibility and conditions. In context with the physical specimens, OSIS provides linkage to more specific sample databases. Currently we connect biological samples collected on a research vessel via the expedition metadata to their current storage locations on land, which will be further refined to connecting single ship-based sampling stations with the storage position of individual samples. Moreover, for geological samples (sediment cores) metadata from OSIS are made available for further in-house use by the software CurationDIS from smartcube GmbH. The sediment core specific details are managed by the curation software which is also used to provide a persistent identifier (IGSN). Future plans include connecting rock samples in a similar structure as sediment cores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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