33,713 results on '"CONTINENTAL shelf"'
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2. How Romania May Benefit from the Natural Gas Resources’ Offshore Exploitation of the Black Sea Romanian Continental Shelf?
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Bulearcă, Marius, Chivu, Luminita, editor, Ioan-Franc, Valeriu, editor, Georgescu, George, editor, De Los Ríos Carmenado, Ignacio, editor, and Andrei, Jean Vasile, editor
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- 2024
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3. Contrasting resistance of prokaryotic plankton biomass and community composition to experimental nutrient inputs in a coastal upwelling system (NW Spain).
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Gutiérrez-Barral, A., Fernández, E., Hernández-Ruiz, M., and Teira, E.
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UPWELLING (Oceanography) , *BIOMASS , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *SPRING , *EUCLIDEAN distance - Abstract
Increasing nutrient inputs driven by global environmental pressures may lead to changes in prokaryotic plankton biomass and community composition in coastal environments. Nutrient addition experiments (inorganic, organic, and mixed) were performed at the continental shelf outside the Ría de Vigo, in spring, summer and autumn 2014, and the results contrasted with those from similar previous experiments carried out inside the ría in 2013. The mixed nutrient additions caused the greatest changes in community composition, mostly consisting of blooms of Vibrionales. Inorganic nutrients yielded increased proportions of Oceanospirillales and Alteromonadales. Euclidean distances among samples were used to estimate compositional resistance to disturbances derived from nutrient additions. Changes in prokaryotic biomass were used as an indicator of biomass resistance. Generally, prokaryotic communities were more resistant to inorganic than organic nutrient additions. Communities sampled inside the ría, presumably exposed to greater perturbations, showed milder variability in the non-amended control than those from outside the ría. By contrast, shelf communities, with higher ambient organic matter concentrations, were more resistant to organic and mixed nutrient additions than those from the ría. Our data suggest that the perturbation history is related to the resistance of microbial communities to changes in nutrient inputs into the coastal ocean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Caribbean red snapper fishing performance indicators in Brazilian amazon shelf: Is it the beginning of the end of a fishing system?
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Mescouto, Niedja, Peixoto, Ualerson Iran, Trindade, Diego Gomes, Moura, Hanna, and Bentes, Bianca
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PAGRUS auratus , *RED drum (Fish) , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *FISHING , *BIOINDICATORS , *COASTS - Abstract
Red snapper fishing (Lutjanus purpureus) is an important fishing activity for the Brazilian economy due to its export. The scarcity of up-to-date information on this system's ecology, economy, and social characteristics contributes to inefficient management. We analyze whether the commercial snapper fishery on the Amazon continental shelf is socioecologically sustainable. For this, an assessment tool was used that can be applied to fishing systems with little data, the Fisheries Performance Indicators (FPI). The results showed that the critical points of this activity are mainly related to the Ecological indicator (2.3) and the Economic indicator (2.8). The best indicator was the Community (3.8). The problems that put at risk the permanence of the activity and its maintenance are: (i) fishing for juveniles; (ii) illegal vessels; (iii) lack of collaboration of the fishing sector with science, and (iv) unreliability of data supplied. All the points mentioned make the snapper fishery on the north coast of Brazil socio-ecologically unsustainable in the long term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Sedimentary characteristics, lithofacies, and paleogeography of the Middle–Lower Cambrian in the Tarim Basin, NW China.
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Ji, Tianyu, Yang, Wei, Wu, Xueqiong, Li, Dejiang, Liu, Mancang, Song, Chengpeng, and Chen, Xi
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PALEOGEOGRAPHY , *LITHOFACIES , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *SEDIMENTARY facies (Geology) , *FACIES , *DOLOMITE , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The Cambrian pre-salt dolomite sequence in the Tarim Basin is a target zone of great strategic significance for hydrocarbon exploration in the basin. Using the results of the interpretation of 3D seismic data from Lunnan and 2D seismic data covering the whole basin, and based on a synthesis of outcrop data, drilling data, well logs, core data, and thin-section data, and the findings from previous studies, this paper studies the characteristics of the facies of the Middle–Lower Cambrian in the platform area in the Tarim Basin, the formation and evolution of platform margins, and the sedimentary characteristics, lithofacies, and paleogeographic characteristics of the Middle–Lower Cambrian series. Based on the types of lithofacies and the seismic facies analysis, the sedimentary facies of the Middle–Lower Cambrian strata can be classified into the five types. From bottom to top, the Middle–Lower Cambrian have experienced several development stages, including the deposition of continental shelf sediments of the Yuertusi Formation, gently sloping non-rimmed platform margin sediments of the Xiaoerbulake Formation, weakly rimmed platform margin sediments of the Wusongger and Shayilike formations, and strongly rimmed platform margin sediments of the Awatage Formation. In each stage, the platform margin shifted further east relative to its location in the previous stage. Based on these results and previous studies, the lithofacies and paleogeography maps of the Middle–Lower Cambrian in the Tarim Basin are modified, and the implications for hydrocarbon exploration in this area are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Influence of the representation of landfast ice on the simulation of the Arctic sea ice and Arctic Ocean halocline.
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Sterlin, Jean, Orval, Tim, Lemieux, Jean-François, Rousset, Clément, Fichefet, Thierry, Massonnet, François, and Raulier, Jonathan
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SEA ice , *HALOCLINE , *OCEAN waves , *POLYNYAS , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *GENERAL circulation model - Abstract
Landfast ice is near-motionless sea ice attached to the coast. Despite its potential for modifying sea ice and ocean properties, most state-of-the-art sea ice models poorly represent landfast ice. Here, we examine two crucial processes responsible for the formation and stabilization of landfast ice, namely sea ice tensile strength and seabed–ice keel interactions. We investigate the impact of these processes on the Arctic sea ice cover and halocline layer using the global coupled ocean–sea ice model NEMO-LIM3. We show that including seabed–ice keel stress improves the seasonality and spatial distribution of the landfast ice cover in the Laptev and East Siberian Seas. This improved landfast ice representation sets the position of flaw polynyas to new locations approximately above the continental shelf break. The impact of sea ice tensile strength on the stability of the Arctic halocline layer is far more effective. Incorporating this process in the model yields a thicker, more consolidated, and less mobile Arctic sea ice pack that further decouples the ocean and atmosphere. As a result, the available potential energy of the Arctic halocline is decreased (increased) by ∼ 30kJ/m 2 (∼ 30kJ/m 2 ) in the Amerasian (Eurasian) compared to the reference simulation excluding sea ice tensile strength and seabed–ice keel stress. Our findings highlight the need to better understand landfast ice physical processes conjointly with the subsequent influences on the ocean and sea ice states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Cold fronts control multiscale spatiotemporal hydroperiod patterns in a man-made subtropical coastal delta (Wax Lake Region, Louisiana USA).
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Huang, Wei, Li, Chunyan, and Rivera-Monroy, Victor H.
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FRONTS (Meteorology) , *STORM surges , *WATER levels , *WATER depth , *WESTERLIES , *WAXES , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
Atmospheric cold fronts quasi-periodically produce storm surges and generate significant subtidal oscillations of water levels and water transport in coastal environments. Yet, it is unclear how these weather events—at regional scales —control the hydrodynamics in delta-dominated coasts. Here, we used a numerical model (SCHISM) to simulate the inundation/drying and water circulations generated by varying winds associated with cold front passages across the Atchafalaya Bay in the northern Gulf of Mexico, specifically the Wax Lake Delta (WLD) region. Water transport induced by winds through major channels of the WLD and that between the adjacent Vermilion Bay and inner shelf were quantified to evaluate the impact of cold fronts. Results show that significant wetting/drying conditions are highly correlated with wind direction and strength. Southerly/easterly winds tend to cause water set-up, thus inundating the delta region, while northerly and westerly winds cause water set-down, draining the bay into the continental shelf. As a result, up to 60% of the delta area (~ 50 km2) can become exposed land under northerly winds. The interconnectivity of the delta channel system is also highly dependent on the wind direction and magnitude: up to 37% of the total transport is through the shallow waters outside of the channels during cold fronts. In contrast, the water levels and velocity variations in the delta region were negatively correlated with the alongshore wind, a result of Ekman transport. At the delta head, where freshwater flows like a strong jet into the region, the velocity is marginally correlated with the wind but mostly correlated with seasonal river discharge variability of river discharge. At the transitional zone between the bay and coastal ocean, water level and surface flows are dominated by tidal forcing in contrast to the delta lobes area where wind regulates the flooding area extension. The bottom velocity and water levels at sites along the Atchafalaya Bay mouth negatively correlate with onshore wind, indicating bottom return flows against the wind. Our study offers a glimpse of how a combination of atmospheric and hydrodynamic forces operate in a young delta, where the coast is experiencing the highest sea level rise in North America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Antarctic Slope Undercurrent and onshore heat transport driven by ice shelf melting.
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Yidongfang Si, Stewart, Andrew L., Silvano, Alessandro, and Garabato, Alberto C. Naveira
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ICE shelves , *ANTARCTIC ice , *MELTING , *STORM surges , *SEA ice , *ICE sheets , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
Elevated ice shelf melt rates in West Antarctica have been attributed to transport of warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) onto the continental shelf via bathymetric troughs. These inflows are supplied by an eastward, subsurface slope current (referred to as the Antarctic Slope Undercurrent) that opposes the westward momentum input from local winds and tides. Despite its importance to basal melt, the mechanism via which the undercurrent forms, and thus what controls the shoreward heat transport, remains unclear. In this study, the dynamics of the undercurrent are investigated using high-resolution process-oriented simulations with coupled ocean, sea ice, and ice shelf components. It is shown that the bathymetric steering of the undercurrent toward the ice shelf is driven by upwelling of meltwater within the ice shelf cavity. Increased basal melt therefore strengthens the undercurrent and enhances onshore CDW transport, which indicates a positive feedback that may accelerate future melt of ice shelves, potentially further destabilizing the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Subsurface Warming of the West Antarctic Continental Shelf Linked to El Niño‐Southern Oscillation.
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Huguenin, Maurice F., Holmes, Ryan M., Spence, Paul, and England, Matthew H.
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ICE shelves , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *CLIMATE change , *SEA ice ,EL Nino ,LA Nina - Abstract
Recent observations suggest that El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) impacts basal melting of West Antarctic ice shelves, yet sparse ocean observations limit our understanding of the associated processes. Here we investigate how ENSO events modulate subsurface West Antarctic shelf temperatures using high‐resolution global ocean‐sea ice model simulations. During El Niño, the subsurface shelf warming between 150 m and the shelf bottom can be up to 0.5°C in front of ice shelves. This warming arises from a weaker Amundsen Sea Low (ASL) and weaker coastal easterlies that reduce on‐shelf Ekman transport of cold surface waters, enabling enhanced transport of warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) onto the shelf. A largely opposite response occurs during La Niña, with a stronger ASL and stronger Ekman transport that results in less cross‐shelf CDW transport and cooling in the subsurface. These findings have implications for interpreting basal melting on interannual to decadal time‐scales in West Antarctica. Plain Language Summary: El Niño‐Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the Earth's dominant year‐to‐year climate variation. The impacts of its two phases, El Niño and La Niña, extend from the tropics to Antarctica through atmospheric waves. Past studies have suggested that West Antarctic ice shelves melt more during El Niño because of warmer ocean waters at the ice shelf bases. However, oceanic changes during El Niño lead to warming on the shelf near the ice which is difficult to isolate. That is because ENSO is only one of many drivers that impact shelf water temperatures. In this work, we simulate isolated ENSO events using an ocean circulation model. We show that during El Niño, the on‐shelf flow of cold surface waters in West Antarctica, driven by coastal easterly winds, is reduced because the winds weaken. To balance out this mass deficit at the surface, more warm CDW flows onto the continental shelf below. During La Niña, we see a largely opposite response. Stronger coastal easterlies increase the on‐shelf flow of cold surface waters and less CDW is flowing onto the shelf. Our results show the link between ENSO and mass loss of the West Antarctic ice shelves and ice sheet. Key Points: Ocean‐sea ice model simulations of El Niño and La Niña events illustrate how they modulate West Antarctic shelf temperaturesEl Niño weakens coastal easterlies, reduces on‐shelf Ekman flow of cold waters, increasing cross‐shelf flow of warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW)The La Niña shelf circulation response is largely opposite and reduces cross‐shelf transport of warm CDW [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Winds of Change: Urgent Challenges and Emerging Opportunities in Submerged Prehistory, a Perspective from the North Sea.
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Gaffney, Vincent, Harding, Rachel, Fitch, Simon, Walker, James, Boothby, Victoria, and Fraser, Andrew Iain
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PREHISTORIC settlements , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *LAND settlement , *LAND settlement patterns , *CULTURAL property , *CULTURAL landscapes , *LANDSCAPE archaeology - Abstract
Development of the continental shelf has accelerated significantly as nations around the world seek to harness offshore renewable energy. Many areas marked for development align with submerged palaeolandscapes. Poorly understood and difficult to protect, these vulnerable, prehistoric landscapes provide specific challenges for heritage management. Indeed, there now appears to be a schism between what underwater cultural heritage policy intends and what it is achieving in practice. Shortcomings in international and national legislature ensures that large parts of the continental shelf, including areas under development, may have little or no legal protection. Increasingly impacted by extensive development, these unique cultural landscapes are ever more at risk. However, heritage challenges posed by such development also create opportunities. An immense amount of data is being generated by development, and there is an opportunity to establish broader cooperative relationships involving industrial stakeholders, national curators, government bodies, and heritage professionals. As a matter of urgency, the archaeological community must better engage with the offshore sector and development process. If achieved, we may revolutionise our knowledge of submerged prehistoric settlement and land use. Otherwise, our capacity to reconstruct prehistoric settlement patterns, learn from past climate change, or simply manage what are among the best-preserved postglacial landscapes globally may be irreparably undermined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Recent Findings on Spawning Patterns and Recommendations for the Fishery Management of the Southern Red Snapper— Lutjanus purpureus (Poey, 1866)—On the Amazon Continental Shelf of Brazil †.
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da Costa Pinheiro, Larissa, Ferreira, Beatrice Padovani, Santos, Paulo Emílio, Peixoto, Ualerson, and Bentes, Bianca
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *CELL analysis , *CELL anatomy , *FISHERY resources , *FISHERY management , *OVUM , *BROOD stock assessment - Abstract
The southern red snapper, Lutjanus purpureus, is one of the primary fishery resources of the Amazon continental shelf. Due to the demand for specimens of less than 900 g in weight, increased fishing effort focusing on this size class has led to a drastic decrease in catches. The present study was based on the analysis of cellular structures in the female gonads (formation of oocytes and other reproductive tissues) to identify reproductive processes and evaluate the effectiveness of current fishery management practices. The presence of postovulatory follicles (POFs) peaked in April, which was interpreted as a period of intense spawning. In addition to POFs, hydrated oocytes peaked in July, indicating either reproductive continuity or a second peak, based on the presence of atretic oocytes and atresia. Given that the local snapper fishery preferentially targets very young individuals, an extension of the closed season from March to July would be recommendable to guarantee the reproductive potential of the spawning stock. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The Effects of Climate Change on Oceanic Sonar Use in the Upper European Continental Shelf.
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Farkas, Abigail
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CLIMATE change , *UNDERWATER acoustics , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
As the global effects of climate change become more known year by year, it becomes ever-more pertinent to examine the effects this may bring for every aspect of modern life we rely on. One topic of focus is that of multi-frequency sonar communication and navigational systems, which rely on well-established relationships relating to wave speed, signal intensity, and attenuation. We compiled data on oceanic temperature, acidity, and salinity in the Upper European Shelf, which includes the North Sea and Mediterranean Sea, from 2006 to 2072 using the CMIP5 future climate model in the RCP8.5 scenario. We calculate that the speed of sound in the northern European oceanic area will decrease by almost 18 m/s by 2072, with an average yearly decrease in sound speed by 0.37 m/s. The attenuation of sound through water will change year by year, calculated based on a higher-order polynomial regression dependent on the frequency of sonar used. The maximum operating ranges of active low-frequency, mid-frequency, and high-frequency sonar systems would theoretically change by +0.06%, -0.19%, and +0.71%, respectively per year, if no other factors are affected. Due to increased sound propagation, the ambient noise level of the ocean would also increase and have some counter-effect to the increased detection range however that increase in noise level was not quantitatively analyzed in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Poleward spawning of Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) is facilitated by ocean warming but triggered by energetic constraints.
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dos Santos Schmidt, T C, Slotte, A, Olafsdottir, A H, Nøttestad, L, Jansen, T, Jacobsen, J A, Bjarnason, S, Lusseau, S M, Ono, K, Hølleland, S, Thorsen, A, Sandø, A B, and Kjesbu, O S
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SPAWNING , *FISH spawning , *MACKERELS , *BROOD stock assessment , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *OCEAN , *GONADS , *FERTILITY - Abstract
The Northeast Atlantic mackerel is an income breeder with indeterminate fecundity, spawning in multiple batches at optimal temperatures around 11°C in the upper water column during February–July along the continental shelf from 36–62°N. Based on macroscopic staging of gonads (N ∼62000) collected in 2004–2021, we detected an on-going extension of spawning activities into the Norwegian Sea feeding area (62–75°N), reaching stable levels around 2012 onwards. This poleward expansion increased as more fish entered the area, whilst the maximum proportions of spawners concurrently dropped from about 75 to 15% from May to July. Detailed histological examinations in 2018 confirmed the macroscopic results but clarified that 38% of the spawning-capable females in July terminated their spawning by atresia. We suggest that increased access to suitable spawning areas (≥10°C), following ocean warming from 2002 onwards, functions as a proximate cause behind the noticed expansion, whereas the ultimate trigger was the historic drop in body growth and condition about 10 years later. Driven by these energetic constraints, mackerel likely spawn in the direction of high prey concentrations to rebuild body resources and secure the future rather than current reproduction success. The ambient temperature that far north is considered suboptimal for egg and larval survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Environmental driving forces and phytoplankton diversity across the Ross Sea region during a summer–autumn transition.
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Cristi, Antonia, Law, Cliff S., Pinkerton, Matt, Lopes dos Santos, Adriana, Safi, Karl, and Gutiérrez‐Rodríguez, Andres
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FRESHWATER phytoplankton , *SPRING , *MIXING height (Atmospheric chemistry) , *AUTUMN , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *DIATOMS , *PHYTOPLANKTON , *SUMMER , *SOIL salinity - Abstract
The Ross Sea is a highly productive system characterized by a seasonal succession of phytoplankton groups. However, most of the current understanding is based on observations on the continental shelf in spring and summer at relatively coarse taxonomic resolution. Here, we characterize community composition (class to species) using V4‐18S rRNA gene metabarcoding on transects to and across the Ross Sea (shelf‐slope and oceanic subregions) during two voyages covering the Austral summer–autumn progression in successive years. Phytoplankton composition shifted from low‐diversity diatom‐dominated (50%) communities during the summer to more diverse dinoflagellate‐dominated (48%) systems during the lower‐productivity autumn season. Prymnesiophyceae abundance was low on both voyages (10%), except on the southeast shelf‐slope, where Phaeocystis antarctica dominated a shallow mixed layer, contrary to its reported preference for deep‐mixing conditions. Amplicon sequence variant analysis identified distinct spatial patterns for two P. antarctica genotypes yet clustered certain species of Bacillariophyta and Prymnesiophyceae, indicating similar environmental preference for genotypes in these groups. Multivariate analysis of environmental drivers found a higher correlation of community composition variation with salinity and macronutrients, but less so with mixed layer depth, considered a primary determinant of taxonomic composition in the Ross Sea. Comparison between years established that community composition was temporally more stable in oceanic relative to shelf‐slope waters. This study of seasonal variation of phytoplankton community composition at finer taxonomic resolution provided insights into species‐ and strain‐specific distribution, ecological preferences, and relationships to environmental conditions in the wider Ross Sea to inform modeling and projection of future regional changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The role of seasonal hypoxia and benthic boundary layer exchange on iron redox cycling on the Oregon shelf.
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Evans, Natalya, Floback, Alexis E., Gaffney, Justin, Chace, Peter J., Luna, Zachary, Knoery, Joël, Reimers, Clare E., and Moffett, James W.
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BOUNDARY layer (Aerodynamics) , *OXYGEN in water , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *CONTINENTAL slopes , *TRACE metals , *INTRACOASTAL waterways - Abstract
Widespread hypoxia occurs seasonally across the Oregon continental shelf, and the duration, intensity, and frequency of hypoxic events have increased in recent years. In hypoxic regions, iron reduction can liberate dissolved Fe(II) from continental shelf sediments. Fe(II) was measured in the water column across the continental shelf and slope on the Oregon coast during summer 2022 using both a trace metal clean rosette and a high‐resolution benthic gradient sampler. In the summer, Fe(II) concentrations were exceptionally high (40–60 nM) within bottom waters and ubiquitous across the Oregon shelf, reflecting the low oxygen condition (40–70 μM) at that time. The observed inverse correlation between Fe(II) and bottom water oxygen concentrations is in agreement with expectations based on previous work that demonstrates oxygen is a major determinant of benthic Fe fluxes. Rapid attenuation of Fe(II) from the benthic boundary layer (within 1 m of the seafloor) probably reflects efficient cross‐shelf advection. One region, centered around Heceta Bank (~ 44°N) acts a hotspot for Fe release on the Oregon continental shelf, likely due to its semi‐retentive nature and high percent mud content in sediment. The results suggest that hypoxia is an important determinant of the inventory of iron is Oregon shelf waters and thus ultimately controls the importance of continental margin‐derived iron to the interior of the North Pacific Basin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF GEOLOGICAL AND ENGINEERING PREDICTORS OF OILFIELD PERFORMANCE RESPONSE: A CASE STUDY OF OILFIELDS ON THE UK CONTINENTAL SHELF.
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Osah, Ukari and Howell, John
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *STATISTICS , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *DATA logging , *REGRESSION analysis , *INDEPENDENT variables , *APPLICATION program interfaces - Abstract
Oilfield production is controlled by a wide range of geological and engineering parameters, many of which are at least partially interrelated. This paper uses multivariate statistical methods (principal component analysis, regression analysis and analysis of variance) to determine how these parameters are related, and which of them are most significant in controlling and predicting oilfield performance. The analysis is based on a database of publicly available oilfield data from the United Kingdom Continental Shelf (UKCS), from which a series of geological, engineering and fluid‐related control variables from 136 fields were pre‐processed and analyzed. This dataset is a subset of a much wider project database for UKCS oil, gas and condensate fields. For this study, the project database was divided into two datasets: a first dataset with 10 parameters from 136 fields, and a second, more detailed dataset with 27 parameters from 38 fields. Both datasets were analysed using principal component analysis in order to investigate possible correlations between numerically/statistically interrogable predictor variables such as porosity, permeability, number of production wells, gas‐oil ratio and reservoir temperature. A regression analysis was then carried out on the predictor variables in order to obtain a ranking of predictability (i.e. how indicative a predictor is of a particular outcome) and sensitivity (how sensitive an outcome is to slight changes in a predictor) in relation to recovery factor based on R‐squared and regression coefficient values. The results showed that key variables from the principal component analysis included field size, number of production wells, PVT, gross depositional environment and reservoir quality. High‐ranking parameters of predictability and sensitivity from the regression analysis were found to include API, net‐to‐gross, porosity and reservoir depth. These results are consistent with previous studies and suggest that it should be possible to forecast oilfield recovery based on only a few selected input variables. As a preliminary test of forecasting ability of the variable permutations put forward, a best‐subsets multiple regression was carried out using a statistical software package and yielded results which corroborated the main findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Pathways of surface oceanic water intrusion into the Amazon Continental Shelf.
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de Freitas, Pedro Paulo, Cirano, Mauro, Teixeira, Carlos Eduardo Peres, Marta-Almeida, Martinho, de Brito Borges, Francisco Flávio, Guerrero-Martin, Camilo Andrés, and Costa Gomes, Vando José
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *REGIONS of freshwater influence , *TRADE winds , *HYDRODYNAMICS - Abstract
The Amazon Continental Shelf (ACS) is a shallow region (< 100 m), with a maximum width of 330 km, which encloses the northern portion of the Brazilian continental shelf and has great ecological and climatic importance on a global scale. Although important scientific efforts have been made to understand the hydrodynamics of the ACS and the dispersion of the Amazon River plume, there are still few studies that address surface oceanic water intrusion into the ACS. This study describes the existence of preferential surface oceanic water intrusion pathways into the ACS along 3 sectors: Maranhão (MA shelf), Pará (PA shelf) and Amapá (AP shelf). The analysis is based on: (i) 306 surface drifter trajectories along 1344 km of the ACS (provided by the Global Drifter Program) and (ii) 20 years of Lagrangian simulations (with Parcels model forced by currents from the reanalysis GLORYS). The results show that the MA shelf sector is the main pathway for surface oceanic water intrusions into the ACS, corresponding to 56% of the intrusions, followed by PA shelf (43%) and AP shelf (1%). During the austral summer, intrusions occur with a higher frequency in PA and AP shelf. The MA shelf shows weak seasonality in the intrusions. The temporal variability of particle intrusion rates into the ACS is directly related to the variability of the trade winds, and the meso-scale circulation associated with the North Brazil Current and the North Equatorial Countercurrent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Holocene paleoenvironmental change based on diatom records from the continental shelf of the Chukchi Sea in the Arctic Ocean.
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Bak, Young-Suk and Nam, Seung-Il
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FOSSIL diatoms , *DIATOMS , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *GLOBAL warming , *OCEAN , *THALASSIOSIRA - Abstract
Diatom assemblages from ARA2B-1A taken in the Chukchi Sea shelf were analyzed to reconstruct paleoenvironmental changes during the last 10 ka BP. The main factors controlling the distribution of diatom in the Chukchi Sea are the relatively warm and nutrient-rich Pacific water inflow after the opening of the Bering Strait. Based on the selected diatoms, three diatom assemblage zones are identified. The diatom assemblage zone I shows a rare or very low abundance, which corresponds to the early Holocene (10–8 ka BP). The diatom assemblage zone II corresponds to the mid-to-late Holocene (8–2 ka BP). It is a seasonal sea-ice environment with relatively abundant diatom valves and Chaetoceors resting spores, as well as sea-ice species, cold-water species, coastal species, and upwelling species. The diatom assemblage zone III corresponds to the late Holocene (2–0 ka BP), and the the sea-ice species generally decreased compared to zone II, while the coastal species Paralia sulcata occurred abundantly. In particular, the Thalassiosira antarctica, a cold-water species, increased distinctly during this time interval. After ∼2 ka BP, T. antarctica rapidly increased while sea-ice species rarely appeared, indicating limited open-marine environments. In particular, after 1 ka BP, T. antarctica decreased while the sea-ice species increased, suggesting that the sea-ice increased again before the recent global warming of the Arctic, the late Holocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Structure of the Bottom Boundary Current South of Iceland and Spreading of Deep Waters by Submesoscale Processes.
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de Marez, Charly, Ruiz‐Angulo, Angel, and Le Corre, Mathieu
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ATLANTIC meridional overturning circulation , *WATER masses , *OCEAN bottom , *WATER currents , *CHANNEL flow , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
The northeastern part of the North Atlantic subpolar gyre is a key passage for the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation upper cell. To this day, the precise pathway and intensity of bottom currents in this area is not clear. In this study, we make use of regional high resolution numerical modeling to suggest that the main bottom current flowing south of Iceland originates from both the Faroe‐Banks Channel and the Iceland‐Faroe Ridge and then flows along the topographic slope. When flowing over the rough topography, this bottom current generates a 200 m large bottom mixed layer. We further demonstrate that many submesoscale structures are generated at the southernmost tip of the Icelandic shelf, which subsequently spread water masses in the Iceland Basin. These findings have major implication for the understanding of the water masses transport in the North Atlantic, and also for the distribution of benthic species along the Icelandic shelf. Plain Language Summary: Water masses formed in the Arctic Ocean overflow into the North Atlantic at the bottom of the ocean, forming the so‐called upper cell of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The pathway of the currents carrying these water masses is still under debate due to a lack of observations. In this study, we discuss in details the pathway of these bottom currents in the specific area south of Iceland. We show that a steady current flows along the Icelandic continental shelf, and then divide in smaller structures when reaching the southernmost tip of Iceland. We also show that on its way, the current mixes the bottom layer of the ocean. These findings have major implication in the understanding of heat and carbon transport at depth in this area, which constitute an important response of the climate to anthropogenic forcing. Key Points: An intense bottom boundary current originating from the Iceland‐Faroe Ridge and the Faroe Bank Channel flows along the Icelandic ShelfThe rough topography and the intensity of the current lead to bottom mixing and sustain a large bottom mixed layerSubsmesoscale structures generated locally participate in the spreading of deep water masses in the Iceland Basin [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Seafloor primary production in a changing Arctic Ocean.
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Attard, Karl, Singh, Rakesh Kumar, Gattuso, Jean-Pierre, Filbee-Dexter, Karen, Krause-Jensen, Dorte, Kühl, Michael, Sejr, Mikael K., Archambault, Philippe, Babin, Marcel, Bélanger, Simon, Bergn, Peter, Glud, Ronnie N., Hancke, Kasper, Jänicke, Stefan, Jing Qin, Rysgaard, Søren, Sørensen, Esben B., Tachon, Foucaut, Wenzhöfer, Frank, and Ardyna, Mathieu
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *SEA ice , *ARCTIC climate , *OCEAN , *MARINE algae - Abstract
Phytoplankton and sea ice algae are traditionally considered to be the main primary producers in the Arctic Ocean. In this Perspective, we explore the importance of benthic primary producers (BPPs) encompassing microalgae, macroalgae, and seagrasses, which represent a poorly quantified source of Arctic marine primary production. Despite scarce observations, models predict that BPPs are widespread, colonizing ~3 million km² of the extensive Arctic coastal and shelf seas. Using a synthesis of published data and a novel model, we estimate that BPPs currently contribute ~77 Tg C y-1 of primary production to the Arctic, equivalent to ~20 to 35% of annual phytoplankton production. Macroalgae contribute ~43 Tg C y-1, seagrasses contribute ~23 Tg C y-1, and microalgae-dominated shelf habitats contribute ~11 to 16 Tg C y-1. Since 2003, the Arctic seafloor area exposed to sunlight has increased by ~47,000 km² y-1, expanding the realm of BPPs in a warming Arctic. Increased macrophyte abundance and productivity is expected along Arctic coastlines with continued ocean warming and sea ice loss. However, microalgal benthic primary production has increased in only a few shelf regions despite substantial sea ice loss over the past 20 y, as higher solar irradiance in the ice-free ocean is counterbalanced by reduced water transparency. This suggests complex impacts of climate change on Arctic light availability and marine primary production. Despite significant knowledge gaps on Arctic BPPs, their widespread presence and obvious contribution to coastal and shelf ecosystem production call for further investigation and for their inclusion in Arctic ecosystem models and carbon budgets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. The fourth slope: A fundamental new classification of continental margins.
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Anell, Ingrid
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CONTINENTAL margins , *SLOPES (Physical geography) , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *MATHEMATICAL functions , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *ANGLES - Abstract
Continental margins develop long submarine slopes, linking the shallow shelves along the continental landmasses to the deep abyssal plain. They are the results of a complex interaction between destructive and constructive processes, although by and large they are sites of deposition. There is a great amount of variation between the length, height, smoothness, gradient and variation thereof between the slope profiles; however, there is also recurring similarity in their shape. The similitude has suggested systematic relationships between the shape and the processes forming them, and led to studies on geomorphological categorisation based on curvatures. The potential for prediction of along-strike variations and connection between morphology and sedimentary process is herein approached through broadening the mathematical functions used, detailed measurement, observation and curve-fitting of over 150 passive continental margins. Previously, three functions have been used to categorise submarine slopes. The present study finds that four mathematical functions closely match the slopes: Linear, Gaussian, exponential and quadratic (positive and negative/inverse), and reveals that the fourth slope, the quadratic, is by far the most common. While exponential and quadratic slopes are similar there is a crucial difference in the way in which the angle of the slope changes. This study suggests that quadratic slopes represent systematically decreasing sediment deposition with distance, previously attributed to exponential slopes. Exponential slopes meanwhile, represent slope readjustment profiles with upper sediment bypass and lower slope aggradation. Linear slopes, which form the longest low-angle slopes, form in response to high sediment input. Abrupt shelf-edges form in shallower water and develop longer slope aprons, suggesting formation from erosional processes. This implies that the quintessential sigmoidal (s-shaped, Gaussian function) slope, with a smooth rollover, represents the fundamental depositional slope profile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Metazoan zooplankton in the Bay of Biscay: a 16-year record of individual sizes and abundances obtained using the ZooScan and ZooCAM imaging systems.
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Grandremy, Nina, Bourriau, Paul, Daché, Edwin, Danielou, Marie-Madeleine, Doray, Mathieu, Dupuy, Christine, Forest, Bertrand, Jalabert, Laetitia, Huret, Martin, Le Mestre, Sophie, Nowaczyk, Antoine, Petitgas, Pierre, Pineau, Philippe, Rouxel, Justin, Tardivel, Morgan, and Romagnan, Jean-Baptiste
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IMAGING systems , *ZOOPLANKTON , *WEB-based user interfaces , *OCEAN bottom , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *METADATA - Abstract
This paper presents two metazoan zooplankton datasets obtained by imaging samples collected on the Bay of Biscay continental shelf in spring during the PELGAS (PELagique GAScogne) integrated surveys over the 2004–2019 period. The samples were collected at night with a 200 µm mesh-size WP2 net fitted with a Hydrobios (back-run stop) mechanical flowmeter and hauled vertically from the sea floor to the surface, with the maximum depth set at 100 m when the bathymetry was deeper than this. The first dataset originates from samples collected from 2004 to 2016 and imaged on land with the ZooScan and is composed of 1 153 507 imaged and measured objects. The second dataset originates from samples collected from 2016 to 2019 and imaged onboard the R/V Thalassa with the ZooCAM and is composed of 702 111 imaged and measured objects. The imaged objects are composed of zooplankton individuals, zooplankton pieces, non-living particles and imaging artefacts ranging from 300 µm to 3.39 mm in equivalent spherical diameter which were individually imaged, measured and identified. Each imaged object is geolocated and associated with a station, a survey, a year and other metadata. Each object is described by a set of morphological and grey-level-based features (8 bit encoding, 0 = black, 255 = white), including size, that were automatically extracted from each individual image. Each object was taxonomically identified using the web-based application Ecotaxa with built-in random-forest and CNN-based semi-automatic sorting tools, which was followed by expert validation or correction. The objects were sorted into 172 taxonomic and morphological groups. Each dataset features a table combining metadata and data at individual-object granularity from which one can easily derive quantitative population and community descriptors such as abundances, mean sizes, biovolumes, biomasses and size structure. Each object's individual image is provided along with the data. These two datasets can be used in combination for ecological studies, as the two instruments are interoperable, or they can be used as training sets for ZooScan and ZooCAM users. The data presented here are available at the SEANOE dataportal: 10.17882/94052 (ZooScan dataset, Grandremy et al., 2023c) and 10.17882/94040 (ZooCAM dataset, Grandremy et al., 2023d). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Satellite NO2 Trends and Hotspots Over Offshore Oil and Gas Operations in the Gulf of Mexico.
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Fedkin, Niko M., Stauffer, Ryan M., Thompson, Anne M., Kollonige, Debra E., Wecht, Holli D., and Elguindi, Nellie
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OFFSHORE oil well drilling , *TERRITORIAL waters , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *NATURAL gas , *AIR pollutants - Abstract
The Outer Continental Shelf of the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) is populated with numerous oil and natural gas (ONG) platforms which produce NOx (NOx = NO + NO2), a major component of air pollution. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is mandated to ensure that the air quality of coastal states is not degraded by these emissions. As part of a NASA‐BOEM collaboration, we conducted a satellite data‐based analysis of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) patterns and trends in the GOM. Data from the OMI and TROPOMI sensors were used to obtain 18+ year records of tropospheric column (TrC) NO2 in three GOM regions: (a) Houston urban area, (b) near shore area off the Louisiana coast, and a (c) deepwater area off the Louisiana coast. The 2004–2022 time series show a decreasing trend for the urban (−0.027 DU/decade) and near shore (−0.0022 DU/decade) areas, and an increasing trend (0.0019 DU/decade) for the deepwater area. MERRA‐2 wind and TROPOMI NO2 data were used to reveal several NO2 hotspots (up to 25% above background values) under calm wind conditions near individual platforms. The NO2 signals from these deepwater platforms and the high density of shallow water platforms closer to shore were confirmed by TrC NO2 anomalies of up to 10%, taking into account the monthly TrC NO2 climatology over the GOM. The results presented in this study establish a baseline for future estimates of emissions from the ONG hotspots and provide a methodology for analyzing NO2 measurements from the new geostationary TEMPO instrument. Plain Language Summary: Oil and natural gas operations emit nitrogen oxides (NOx), which are major air pollutants and precursors to ground‐level ozone. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) agency is responsible for managing planned oil and natural gas (ONG) activity on the outer continental shelf, and is mandated to ensure related emissions do not degrade air quality of coastal states. In collaboration with BOEM, we used satellite data from the OMI and TROPOMI sensors to construct an 18+ year record of tropospheric nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a proxy for NOx, in the Gulf Coast region. These time series focused on three areas: (a) Houston urban, (b) off the Louisiana coast, and (c) deepwater Gulf off Louisiana. These regions experienced changes in tropospheric column NO2 of −13.7%, −5.8%, and +5.4% per decade, respectively. We also identified NO2 hotspots from ONG platforms using TROPOMI NO2 averages under calm wind conditions. The ONG deepwater platforms enhance NO2 background amounts by 7%–13% on average, and up to 25% for the Mars and Olympus platforms combined. The results presented here will facilitate our work on emissions estimates from these sources and on applications to the recently launched TEMPO instrument. Key Points: Satellite NO2 records and trends of urban, coastal and deep water areas from 2005 to 2022, are presentedClassifying NO2 over the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) under various wind conditions highlights typical patterns in average NO2 valuesGOM NO2 hotspots from deepwater platforms were identified by TROPOMI under calm wind conditions, the largest of which is over Mars/Olympus [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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24. Calibrating ecosystem models to support ecosystem-based management of marine systems.
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Bentley, Jacob W, Chagaris, David, Coll, Marta, Heymans, Johanna J, Serpetti, Natalia, Walters, Carl J, and Christensen, Villy
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ECOSYSTEM services , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *ECOSYSTEMS , *EWES , *CALIBRATION - Abstract
Ecosystem models, such as Ecopath with Ecosim (EwE), provide a platform to simulate intricate policy scenarios where multiple species, pressures, and ecosystem services interact. Complex questions often return complex answers, necessitating evidence and advice to be communicated in terms of trade-offs, risks, and uncertainty. Calibration procedures for EwE, which can act as a source of uncertainty and bias in model results, have yet to be explored in a comprehensive way that communicates how sensitive model outputs are to different calibration approaches. As the EwE community has grown, multiple divergent approaches have been applied to calibrate models through the estimation of vulnerability multipliers: parameters that augment the consumption rate limits of predators. Here we explore the underlying principles of vulnerability multipliers as well as existing calibration approaches and their justification. Two case studies are presented: the first explores how vulnerability multipliers emerge based on the chosen calibration approach using simulated data, while the second takes two operational EwE models (Irish Sea and Northwest Atlantic Continental Shelf) and compares their outputs when calibrated following alternate calibration approaches. We show how calibration approaches can impact model-derived advice and provide a list of best practice recommendations for EwE calibration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Coastal vulnerability assessment along the coast of Kerala, India, based on physical, geological, and socio-economic parameters.
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K., Saikrishnan, K.V., Anand, and V., Agilan
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COASTS , *ANALYTIC hierarchy process , *LAND cover , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *POPULATION density , *SHORELINES - Abstract
The increase in population and rapid economic development activities increase vulnerability along the coastal areas. Coastal zones are among the planet's most dynamic regions and are susceptible to natural and anthropogenic hazards. To comprehend how risks and hazards are distributed spatially along the coast, coastal vulnerability assessment is crucial. This study aims at identifying the vulnerable zones along the coast of Kerala, India. For this, the coastal vulnerability index (CVI) is calculated by considering the physical, geological, and socio-economic parameters. The physical-geological parameters considered are nearshore bed slope, shoreline change rate, coastal elevation, tidal range, and continental shelf width. The socio-economic parameters include population density, road network, and land use/land cover. Analytical hierarchy process (AHP) is used for obtaining weights for physical-geological and socio-economic parameters. Coastal vulnerability results show that 82.40 km of the coastal stretch has a very high CVI value along the coast of Kerala, accounting for 13.87% of the total coastline. The most vulnerable stretches are along the coast of Kozhikode, Malappuram, Thrissur, Ernakulam, Alappuzha, and Trivandrum districts while Kasargod and Kannur districts have no coastal stretches with very high CVI. High population density, low nearshore bed slope, low coastal elevation, high erosion rates, built-up areas, and roads near to the coastline are some of the factors contributing to very high CVI in coastal districts of Kerala. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Trait‐based analyses reveal global patterns in diverse diets of albacore tuna (Thunnus alalunga).
- Author
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Hardy, Natasha A., Matuch, Cindy, Roote, Zachary, George, Iris, Muhling, Barbara A., Jacox, Michael G., Hazen, Elliott L., Bograd, Steven J., Crowder, Larry B., and Green, Stephanie J.
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- *
TUNA , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *DIET , *HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) , *FOOD chains - Abstract
Simplifying complex species interactions can facilitate tracking and predicting functional responses to ecological stressors. This is important for highly migratory pelagic predators, exploiting diverse prey fields as they respond to dynamic environments. We reconstructed the historical resource use of albacore tuna (Thunnus alalunga) globally from the 1900s to 2015 and confirmed highly biodiverse diets with 308 prey species, and an additional 238 taxa at coarser taxonomic resolution. We synthesised prey diversity into seven functional trait guilds using hierarchical divisive clustering algorithms as a function of four traits that describe habitat use and influence predator–prey encounter rates – prey habitat association vertically in the water column, horizontally along the coastal to pelagic gradient, seasonal and diel vertical migratory behaviour. We explored variability in historical composition of albacore diets across geographies based on species identity, individual trait information and functional trait guilds using a multi‐matrix modelling framework. Taxonomic information remains important for trophic ecology, however, species‐based diet composition in albacore tuna was highly variable across geographies and years sampled, making interpretation of these patterns difficult. By simplifying species identity into habitat‐based traits, we highlight changes in prey resources consumed, such as the historical importance of near‐surface epipelagic prey resources from coastal to oceanic habitats, and seasonally migrating continental shelf prey, with less frequent pulses of deeper water and demersal taxa. Trait information and trait guilds serve as useful classification frameworks for identifying functionally redundant food web linkages across biodiverse prey, and will prove useful in tracking predators' foraging responses to changing resource availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Effects of marine climate variability on the relative abundance of Lutjanus purpureus (POEY, 1866) on the Amazon Continental Shelf.
- Author
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Trindade, Diego Gomes, de Almeida de Gouveia, Nelson, da Mescouto, Niedja Luana da Costa, de Sousa Moura, Hanna Tereza Garcia, da Silva, Ualerson Iran Peixoto, and Bentes, Bianca
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *PAGRUS auratus , *RED drum (Fish) , *REMOTE sensing ,EL Nino - Abstract
The aim of this study was to analyze the effects of climate and marine variability on the catches of Lutjanus purpureus in three sectors of the Amazon Continental Shelf. Remote sensing data were compared with landings (CPUE) between 1997 and 2007 and analyzed for partial influence obtained through the Generalized Additive Model. Additionally, significant variables were analyzed through Wavelet Cross‐Spectrum, and periods of high correlation between variables in space and time were identified. The results indicated a high coherence between catch per unit effort (CPUE) and environmental variables on an interannual scale, suggesting that Red Snapper fishing is mainly influenced by the seasonal effects of oceanographic variables. These results suggest that fluctuations in Red Snapper catches between 1997 and 2007 may be the result of natural processes that occur in the Amazon Continental Shelf every year in synergy with environmental variables, which are also indirectly affected by the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) pattern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. Mesoscale spatial variability of ichthyoplankton in the Southwest Atlantic during the autumn–winter period.
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Santos, Régis, Falcão, Cristina, and Cabral, Elisabeth
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FISH larvae , *ICHTHYOPLANKTON , *FISH eggs , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *CONTINENTAL slopes , *AGRICULTURAL egg production - Abstract
To gain a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying spatial heterogeneity in ichthyoplankton communities in the SW Atlantic, we examined for the first time the latitudinal and continental shelf–slope gradients in ichthyoplankton structure and oceanographic features in the Campos Basin during the relaxation phase of coastal upwellings (late autumn to early winter). This region, located on SE Brazil's continental margin, is the most productive offshore oil basin in the country and has ecological relevance owing to the existence of areas that experiences mesoscale (tens to hundreds of kilometers) processes (eddies, filaments, and upwelling) caused by the interaction of continental shelf and slope circulation with deep water masses. The present study collected a total of 3892 fish eggs and 10,030 larvae from 36 sampling stations, averaging 22 eggs per 100 m3 and 56 larvae per 100 m3. A total of 250 taxa (5 for fish eggs and 248 for larvae) were identified, encompassing 80 families and 145 genera. Species distribution exhibited a considerable degree of spatial variability, which was related mostly to hydrological characteristics. In general, greater densities were associated with higher nutrient concentrations areas. Through distance‐based Redundancy Analysis, some discriminating species were found to associate with certain areas of the continental shelf characterized by colder temperatures. The ichthyoplankton distribution patterns suggested a potential influence from mesoscale oceanographic fronts, specifically those that induce upwelling of the cold and nutrient‐rich South Atlantic Central Water. Nonetheless, the methodologies used in this study faced challenges in distinctly identifying these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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29. Relevance of implementation of the project for the construction of the Solikamsk-Syktyvkar-Arkhangelsk railway considering the climatic conditions of the Northern Regions of Russia.
- Author
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Keropyan, A. M., Kalakutskiy, A. V., and Mitusov, P. E.
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RAILROAD design & construction , *CONSTRUCTION projects , *TRADE routes , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *ROADS , *RAILROAD management ,NORTHEAST Passage - Abstract
As a result of the studies carried out, routes for transportation of goods from the PRC (People's Republic of China) to European countries have been identified. These are the Northern Sea Route (through the Sea of Okhotsk) and the Southern Sea Route (through the Suez Canal). However, a shorter way of delivering goods to European countries from China is possible within implementation of construction of the Solikamsk – Syktyvkar – Arkhangelsk railway, with the continuation of the highway through Yekaterinburg to Shanghai. Wherein, it is necessary to solve the problem associated with the icing of railway rails in the Arctic and the continental shelf of Russia (on the solution of which the team of authors is working), which will increase the traction capacity of operated and newly created locomotives. This will contribute to solving the problem of transporting various goods in the Northern Regions of Russia and will ensure creation of land year-round communication between the countries of Europe and the PRC. In addition, the created railway will be of strategic importance, being the basis for the industrial and infrastructural development of the North of Russia and the Urals. The paper substantiates the relevance of implementation of the project under consideration, since the PRC will have an opportunity to take part in construction of the Shanghai-Arkhangelsk railway, which will more than 2 times reduce the delivery time of goods from the PRC to Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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30. A new record of bony fish prey for the genus Isistius (Chondrichthyes: Dalatiidae) in a coastal zone of southeastern Mexico
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Armando T Wakida-Kusunoki, Vicente Anislado-Tolentino, Jorge I Rosales-Vásquez, Rodolfo Castro-Barbosa, and Luis Fernando Del Moral-Flores
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bite wounds ,rachycentron canadum ,tabasco ,opportunistic feeding ,continental shelf ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The first report of bite wounds from cookiecutter shark in a specimen of cobia in the Southern Gulf of Mexico is described. The specimen was captured by artisanal fishery in the coastal zone of Tabasco, Mexico. It presented three bite wounds with 25 to 26 teeth marks per wound, major axis interval between 3.7 and 4.7 cm and all areas of less than 10 cm2. This is new record of a bony fish as prey of genus Isistius maybe of I. brasiliensis in coastal waters over the continental shelf, in the Southern Gulf of Mexico.
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- 2024
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31. Mechanisms of Heat Flux Across the Southern Greenland Continental Shelf in 1/10° and 1/12° Ocean/Sea Ice Simulations
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Morrison, Theresa J, Dukhovskoy, Dmitry S, McClean, Julie L, Gille, Sarah T, and Chassignet, Eric P
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Life Below Water ,Climate Action ,ocean modeling ,ice-sheet ocean interactions ,continental shelf ,Geophysics ,Oceanography ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Published
- 2023
32. Dispersion and fate of methane emissions from cold seeps on Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand
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Cliff S. Law, Charine Collins, A. Marriner, Sarah J. Bury, Julie C. S. Brown, and Graham Rickard
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methane ,hydrates ,hydrodynamic model ,methane oxidation ,continental shelf ,New Zealand ,Science - Abstract
The influence of cold seep methane on the surrounding benthos is well-documented but the fate of dissolved methane and its impact on water column biogeochemistry remains less understood. To address this, the distribution of dissolved methane was determined around three seeps on the south-east Hikurangi Margin, south-east of New Zealand, by combining data from discrete water column sampling and a towed methane sensor. Integrating this with bottom water current flow data in a dynamic Gerris model determined an annual methane flux of 3 x 105 kg at the main seep. This source was then applied in a Regional Ocean Modelling System (ROMS) simulation to visualize lateral transport of the dissolved methane plume, which dispersed over ∼100 km in bottom water within 1 year. Extrapolation of this approach to four other regional seeps identified a combined plume volume of 3,500 km3 and annual methane emission of 0.4–3.2 x 106 kg CH4 y-1. This suggests a regional methane flux of 1.1–10.9 x 107 kg CH4 y-1 for the entire Hikurangi Margin, which is lower than previous hydroacoustic estimates. Carbon stable isotope values in dissolved methane indicated that lateral mixing was the primary determinant of methane in bottom water, with potential methane oxidation rates orders of magnitude lower than the dilution rate. Calculations indicate that oxidation of the annual total methane emitted from the five seeps would not significantly alter bottom water dissolved carbon dioxide, oxygen or pH; however, superimposition of methane plumes from different seeps, which was evident in the ROMS simulation, may have localized impacts. These findings highlight the value of characterizing methane release from multiple seeps within a hydrodynamic model framework to determine the biogeochemical impact, climate feedbacks and connectivity of cold seeps on continental shelf margins.
- Published
- 2024
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33. Resolving Multi‐Stage Rupture Process of the 2021 Mw 4.9 Offshore Jeju Island Earthquake From Relative Source Time Functions.
- Author
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Han, Sangwoo, Kim, Won‐Young, Lim, Hobin, Son, Young Oh, Seo, Min‐Seong, Park, Jun Yong, and Kim, YoungHee
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EARTHQUAKES , *GREEN'S functions , *SEISMOLOGICAL stations , *SHEAR waves , *EARTHQUAKE zones , *ATMOSPHERIC nucleation , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
We used local P and S waves, and regional Lg waves to investigate the Mw 4.9 Offshore Jeju Island earthquake, whose records show evidence of a complex rupture. This earthquake provides a rare window to understand the seismogenesis of moderate‐sized earthquakes on the southern Korea–East China Sea continental shelf. We computed the relative source time functions (RSTFs) by aligning the signals on the origin time of the main and its empirical Green's function (EGF) events, allowing us to use them as differential times of the EGF pair. We determined subevent locations using direct‐wave RSTFs, and captured the rupture variability of the two large subevents using waveform inversion of stacked Lg‐wave RSTFs. The first subevent rupture started by two weak nucleation phases and propagated slowly and bilaterally. Then the second subevent ruptured westward. Our analysis demonstrates that the Lg‐wave train observed at regional distances is useful in investigating detailed slip history. Plain Language Summary: In‐depth studies of small‐to‐moderate‐sized earthquakes in offshore regions are often limited by sparse seismographic station coverage and a lack of close observations. Here, we demonstrate the effective use of local P and S waves and regional Lg waves to investigate the detailed rupture process of the 2021 Mw 4.9 Offshore Jeju Island, Korea earthquake. Lg wave is a guided S wave composed of a superposition of post‐critical reflections in the crust. Detailed seismological analyses using Lg waves revealed that earthquake rupture processes can be spatially complex even in areas with low seismic activity. Our analysis demonstrates that the Lg wave observed at distances greater than 150 km from the epicenter alleviates the limited local station coverage and can be a very useful signal to image the detailed slip history of the earthquake. Our analysis revealed the rupture complexity of the earthquake, expressed as a cascade of four sequential ruptures consisting of two small nucleation phases and two large subevents. Such detailed knowledge of earthquake rupture evolution is critical for understanding seismogenesis in this stable continental region setting. Key Points: We demonstrate an approach to capture the complex rupture process of an offshore moderate‐sized earthquake using limited observationsDirect P and S waves and Lg waves are used to image a spatiotemporal slip history of the Mw 4.9 Offshore Jeju Island, Korea earthquakeResults show a cascading rupture of four subevents on a fault, offering a deeper understanding of event mechanism in low‐seismicity regions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Effects of pockmark activity on iron cycling and mineral composition in continental shelf sediments (southern Baltic Sea).
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Kurowski, Stanisław, Łukawska-Matuszewska, Katarzyna, Čović, Anđela, Jozić, Dražan, and Brodecka-Goluch, Aleksandra
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IRON , *HYDROGEN sulfide , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *GAS seepage , *SEDIMENTS , *X-ray powder diffraction , *FREIGHT trucking - Abstract
Pockmarks are formed as a result of gas (methane) or/and groundwater outflow from the sea bottom. Methane, the second most important (after CO2) greenhouse gas, has a significant impact on biogeochemical processes in the bottom sediments by affecting the cycling of some elements, e.g. C, Fe, and S. Active pockmarks may also lead to changes in water column conditions by causing nutrients release from sediments. In the present study, we have focused on the impact of biogeochemical processes in pockmarks (methanogenesis, anaerobic methane oxidation, and groundwater seepage) on the transformation of iron (Fe) and the mineral composition of the sediment. In pore water, concentrations of hydrogen sulfide, phosphate, ammonia, sulfate, chloride, dissolved inorganic carbon, iron, and methane were analyzed. In the sediment, Fe speciation was performed using sequential extraction. The mineral composition was determined using powder X-Ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy. The results from two pockmarks (with active gas seepage and groundwater infiltration) and two reference stations in the southern Baltic Sea show that geochemical conditions in pockmark sediments are significantly different from those in the typical muddy sea bottom. Pore water in pockmarks is characterized by lower sulfate and higher dissolved carbon concentrations as compared to areas of the seafloor where such structures are absent. This is due to the outflow of groundwater, which was confirmed by lower chloride concentration. In addition, sulfate is used to oxidize methane diffusing from deeper layers. Sediments in pockmarks are enriched in Fe(II) carbonates and depleted in Fe(III) (oxy)hydroxides, resulting from the anaerobic oxidation of methane with Fe(III) (Fe-AOM). Ferrous iron produced in large quantities during Fe-AOM is precipitated with carbonates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Meteoric water and glacial melt in the southeastern Amundsen Sea: a time series from 1994 to 2020.
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Hennig, Andrew N., Mucciarone, David A., Jacobs, Stanley S., Mortlock, Richard A., and Dunbar, Robert B.
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GLACIAL melting , *MELTWATER , *TIME series analysis , *ICE shelves , *SEA ice , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
Ice sheet mass loss from Antarctica is greatest in the Amundsen Sea sector, where "warm" modified Circumpolar Deep Water moves onto the continental shelf and melts and thins the bases of ice shelves hundreds of meters below the sea surface. We use nearly 1000 paired salinity and oxygen isotope analyses of seawater samples collected on seven expeditions from 1994 to 2020 to produce a time series of glacial meltwater inventory for the southeastern Amundsen Sea continental shelf. Deep water column salinity– δ18 O relationships yield freshwater end-member δ18 O values from -31.3±1.0‰ to -28.4±1.0‰ , consistent with the isotopic composition of local glacial ice. We use a two-component meteoric water end-member approach that accounts for precipitation in the upper water column, and a pure glacial meteoric water end-member is employed for the deep water column. Meteoric water inventories are comprised of nearly pure glacial meltwater in deep shelf waters and of >74% glacial meltwater in the upper water column. Total meteoric water inventories range from 8.1±0.7 to 9.6±0.8 m and exhibit greater interannual variability than trend over the study period, based on the available data. The relatively long residence time in the southeastern Amundsen Sea allows changes in mean meteoric water inventories to diagnose large changes in local melt rates, and improved understanding of regional circulation could produce well-constrained glacial meltwater fluxes. The two-component meteoric end-member technique improves the accuracy of the sea ice melt and meteoric fractions estimated from seawater δ18 O measurements throughout the entire water column and increases the utility for the broader application of these estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Algal cover as a driver of diversity in communities associated with mussel assemblages across eastern Pacific ecoregions.
- Author
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Wilbur, Lynn, Küpper, Frithjof C., and Louca, Vasilis
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL regions , *MUSSELS , *ALGAL communities , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *SPECIES diversity , *FUNCTIONAL groups - Abstract
Research on intertidal mussel assemblages and associated communities has revealed that complexity and structure are influenced by environmental heterogeneity and local‐scale factors affecting recruitment. Research in situ in eastern and western Pacific intertidal ecosystems has suggested drivers of species diversity and community structure encompassing large geographic scales, however, there are major gaps in geographic coverage. Our aim is to fill some of these gaps by analyzing macrofaunal functional group diversity and effects of environmental factors on intertidal mussel communities from three distinct marine ecoregions in the southern and northern hemispheres. We identified the effects of algal cover and environmental heterogeneity on species richness and evenness, and we modeled factors effecting mussel layer complexity from assemblages in three marine ecoregions. We analyzed macrofaunal species diversity within one of the austral ecoregions based on the width of the coastal shelf. Species richness was highest in samples from the northern hemisphere while evenness was highest in samples from the southern hemisphere. Similarity in functional group structure for all communities sampled was ≤55% (Bray–Curtis dissimilarity) and ≤35% (Chao–Jaccard dissimilarity). Wave exposure had a significant effect on shell length and complexity of mussel matrices on rocky bench platforms. The presence of algal cover had a strong effect on species richness in mussel matrices regardless of complexity, while algal canopies had no effect on species evenness. Overall, this study provides significant new insight on the community complexity of mussel beds in parts of the world which have been poorly studied in this regard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. What Causes the Subsurface Velocity Maximum of the East Australian Current?
- Author
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Oke, Peter R., Rykova, Tatiana, Sloyan, Bernadette M., and Ridgway, Ken R.
- Subjects
- *
SEAWATER , *BAROCLINICITY , *VELOCITY , *EDDIES , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *WATER depth , *SOLAR cycle , *CORALS - Abstract
The East Australian Current (EAC) system includes a poleward jet that flows adjacent to the continental shelf, a southward and eastward extension, and a complex eddy field. The EAC jet is often observed to be subsurface intensified. Here, we explain that there are two factors that cause the EAC to develop a subsurface maximum. First, the EAC flows as a narrow current, carrying low-density water from the Coral Sea into the denser waters of the Tasman Sea. This results in horizontal density gradients with a different sign on either side of the jet, negative onshore and positive offshore. According to the thermal wind relation, this produces vertical gradients in southward current that are surface intensified onshore and subsurface intensified offshore. Second, we show that the winds over the shelf are mostly downwelling favorable, drawing the surface EAC waters onshore. This aligns the region of positive horizontal density gradients with the EAC core, producing a subsurface velocity maximum. The presence of a subsurface maximum may produce baroclinic instabilities that play a role in eddy formation and EAC separation from the coast. Significance Statement: Observations of the East Australian Current (EAC) show that the strongest currents are often below the surface at about 100-m depth. Two factors cause this subsurface maximum. First, because the EAC is a narrow jet, carrying warm water southward from the Coral Sea, the density gradient across the jet changes sign, causing surface-intensified currents onshore and subsurface-intensified currents offshore. Second, the wind field over the shelf often pulls the shallow waters shoreward, shifting the waters that cause subsurface intensification to align with the center of the jet, resulting in a subsurface maximum of the EAC. This process may be responsible for the generation of eddies in the Tasman Sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Cross-Shelf Regime of a Wind-Driven Supercritical River Plume.
- Author
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Yankovsky, Elizabeth and Yankovsky, Alexander
- Subjects
- *
REGIONS of freshwater influence , *BIOLOGICAL productivity , *GULF Stream , *INTERNAL waves , *FRESH water , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
River plumes are a dominant forcing agent in the coastal ocean, transporting tracers and nutrients offshore and interacting with coastal circulation. In this study we characterize the novel "cross-shelf" regime of freshwater river plumes. Rather than remaining coastally trapped (a well-established regime), a wind-driven cross-shelf plume propagates for tens to over 100 km offshore of the river mouth while remaining coherent. We perform a suite of high-resolution idealized numerical experiments that offer insight into how the cross-shelf regime comes about and the parameter space it occupies. The wind-driven shelf flow comprising the geostrophic along-shelf and the Ekman cross-shelf transport advects the plume momentum and precludes geostrophic adjustment within the plume, leading to continuous generation of internal solitons in the offshore and upstream segment of the plume. The solitons propagate into the plume interior, transporting mass within the plume and suppressing plume widening. We examine an additional ultra-high-resolution case that resolves submesoscale dynamics. This case is dynamically consistent with the lower-resolution simulations, but additionally captures vigorous inertial-symmetric instability leading to frontal erosion and lateral mixing. We support these findings with observations of the Winyah Bay plume, where the cross-shelf regime is observed under analogous forcing conditions to the model. The study offers an in-depth introduction to the cross-shelf plume regime and a look into the submesoscale mixing phenomena arising in estuarine plumes. Significance Statement: In this study, we characterize a novel regime of freshwater river plumes. Rather than spreading near to or along the coast, under certain conditions river plumes may propagate away from the coast and remain coherent for tens to over 100 km offshore. Cross-shelf plumes provide a mechanism by which freshwater and river-borne materials may be transported into the open ocean, especially across wide continental shelves. Such plumes carry nutrients critical for biological productivity offshore and interact with large-scale oceanic features such as the Gulf Stream. We use high-resolution numerical modeling to examine how the cross-shelf regime arises and support our findings with observational evidence. We also study the mixing phenomena and fluid instabilities evolving within such plumes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A New Turricula (Conoidea, Clavatulidae) fromthe Northwest Shelf of Western Australia.
- Author
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Zheng, Yao and Maxwell, Stephen J.
- Subjects
- *
SCULPTURE - Abstract
A new species of Turricula from the northwest continental shelf of Western Australia is described. Turricula infida Yao and Maxwell, nov. sp. can be differentiated from other Turricula by the sculpture of the upper whorls with its distinctive subsutural nodulations. This study indicates that further work is needed in Turricula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effect of environmental variability on seabird assemblages across the Brazil–Malvinas Confluence during the austral winter.
- Author
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Hernandez, Maximiliano Manuel, Favero, Marco, and Seco Pon, Juan Pablo
- Subjects
- *
CONTINENTAL shelf , *SPECIES diversity , *ATMOSPHERIC pressure , *SPECIES distribution , *RESOURCE exploitation , *WINTER - Abstract
The Argentine Continental Shelf and its shelf break are among the most productive marine areas in the world, sustaining a high biodiversity and biomass of seabirds. The at-sea distribution of these species is greatly affected by biological and physical variability. Most prior studies about assemblages of seabirds in the study area are restricted to waters south of 40°S during the austral summer. This study aims to describe and analyze the seabird assemblages associated with the Brazil–Malvinas Confluence area off the coast of northern Patagonia, Argentina during the austral winter, and the effect environmental variability exerts on species richness and abundance in pelagic areas. Data were collected during an oceanographic survey performed between May and June 2022, in continental shelf and oceanic waters (37−41°S, 53−58°W). A total of 968 individuals belonging to 21 species were observed with the Black-browed albatross, the White-chinned petrel, and the Atlantic petrel being the most abundant and frequent species recorded. The highest seabird abundances and species richness were recorded along the continental shelf and shelf break (38º00'−38º30'S). Wind direction, wind intensity, cloudiness, and atmospheric pressure had significant effects on seabird abundance and richness. The study area is of particular interest for the extraction of both living and non-renewable resources; thus, the information provided by this study can contribute to better administration of fisheries, as well as to the creation of management plans for the exploitation of non-renewable resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Book Review: Critically appraising Bourdieu and Marx: Practices of Critique.
- Author
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Thorpe, Christopher
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *SOCIAL theory , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *ACCOUNT books , *LOGIC - Abstract
The book "Bourdieu and Marx: Practices of Critique" examines the intersection of the works of Pierre Bourdieu and Karl Marx. Divided into three parts, the book delves into topics such as domination, critique of economic practices and theories, and interpreting critique of ideology. The contributors offer fresh perspectives and re-readings of Bourdieu and Marx's texts, challenging common criticisms of Bourdieu and emphasizing the value of his work. The book also discusses the different intellectual contexts in which their ideas have developed and circulated, particularly highlighting the lack of emphasis on Bourdieu as a critic of neoliberalism and economic science in the British academic context. The text calls for further research and critical practice, emphasizing the importance of preserving intellectual inheritance and engaging with the ideas of Marx and Bourdieu to understand and challenge the present. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Evaluating ecological benefits of oceanic protected areas.
- Author
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Blanluet, Arthur, Game, Edward T., Dunn, Daniel C., Everett, Jason D., Lombard, Amanda T., and Richardson, Anthony J.
- Subjects
- *
PROTECTED areas , *MARINE parks & reserves , *HABITAT conservation , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
The ratification of the United Nations High Seas Treaty will help protect overlooked oceanic ecosystems, leading to an expected large increase in the declaration of oceanic (defined here as waters >200 m in depth) Marine Protected Areas (oMPAs) in the current decade. In many places this will need to be done in cooperation with existing sectoral management bodies. Despite this likely expansion, our current understanding of the ecological benefits of oMPAs is derived primarily from coastal protected areas, which are shallower, generally well mixed, and face different threats than oMPAs. Consequently, the strong scientific consensus for the ecological benefits of coastal MPAs is lacking for oMPAs. Emerging new sampling platforms and methods can help address this gap and inform the design and placement of new oMPAs that aim to conserve both pelagic and benthic biodiversity. Oceans beyond the continental shelf represent the largest yet least protected environments. The new agreement to increase protection targets to 30% by 2030 and the recent United Nations (UN) High Seas Treaty try to address this gap, and an increase in the declaration of oceanic Marine Protected Areas (oMPAs) in waters beyond 200 m in depth is likely. Here we find that there is contradictory evidence concerning the benefits of oMPAs in terms of protecting pelagic habitats, providing refuge for highly mobile species, and potential fisheries benefits. We discover a mismatch between oMPA management objectives focusing on protection of pelagic habitats and biodiversity, and scientific research focusing on fisheries benefits. We suggest that the solution is to harness emerging technologies to monitor inside and outside oMPAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Origin and alteration of sinking and resuspended organic matter on a benthic nepheloid layer influenced continental shelf.
- Author
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Golombek, Nina Y., Kienast, Markus, Pilskaln, Cynthia H., Algar, Christopher, and Sherwood, Owen
- Subjects
- *
AMINO acid analysis , *FLUX pinning , *ORGANIC compounds , *HEAVY ions , *WATER depth , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *WATER transfer , *ISOTOPIC analysis , *SOLAR stills - Abstract
Understanding the biogeochemical transformations that particulate organic matter (POM) undergoes from production in surface waters to deposition on the seafloor is fundamental for interpreting the paleoceanographic record preserved in sediments. Here we use compound-specific N isotope analysis of amino acids (δ15N AA) from two sediment traps (deployed at 150 m and 250 m water depth) and underlying push-core sediments to investigate temporal and depth related changes in the export flux on a continental shelf basin influenced by a prominent benthic nepheloid layer (BNL). Despite apparent isotopic similarities between traps, molecular data show distinct patterns between the shallower (150 m) and deeper (250 m) sediment traps – specifically, depth-related differences in the relative contributions of particles with different processing histories. The export flux in the shallower trap is dominated by animal sources rather than phytodetritus. Significant microbial degradation in the deeper trap and sediments emphasizes the key roles of resuspension-deposition cycles that are mainly (but not exclusively) facilitated by a thick year-around BNL in the region. The BNL acts as a 'microbial reactor' reworking sinking POM before its ultimate deposition, and also diluting exported material with previously deposited surface sediments. This heavy modification of POM during its passage through and residence in the BNL opens potentially important questions for our current understanding of OC preservation and interpretations of proxy δ15N records in BNL-influenced areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. New Insight Into the Source and Sink of 227Ac in the Ocean.
- Author
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Seo, Hojong, Lee, Hanbyul, and Kim, Guebuem
- Subjects
- *
PRECIPITATION scavenging , *OCEAN , *OCEANIC mixing , *CONTINENTAL margins , *GEOCHEMICAL cycles , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
Actinium‐227 (227Ac) has been used as a powerful tracer of diapycnal mixing in the ocean, assuming that it is conservative and originates mainly from deep‐sea sediments. However, here we show an unexpectedly large source (continental margin) and sink (scavenging) of 227Ac in the ocean, based on high‐resolution 227Ac distributions obtained for the first time by mooring Mn‐fibers in the East Sea (Japan Sea). Although we expected a decrease in radium‐228 (228Ra) to 227Ac ratios with depth owing to their different half‐lives, the ratios increased with depth in the upper layer, indicating efficient removal of 227Ac by particle scavenging. In addition, unusually high 227Ac activities (∼15 dpm m−3) were observed in the surface layer, likely due to the horizontal transport of 227Ac‐enriched shelf water. Thus, our results suggest refining our understanding of the geochemical cycle and application of 227Ac in the ocean. Plain Language Summary: Distributions of 227Ac provide crucial information for the vertical mixing of the deep ocean on timescales of up to 100 years. However, behaviors of 227Ac in the ocean have not been well understood to date because of its extremely low concentration. In this study, we for the first time determined high‐resolution 227Ac profiles by mooring Mn‐fibers in a marginal sea of the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Our results display that the shelf source inputs as well as efficient removal by particle scavenging have been overlooked so far. In particular, we emphasize that the removal of 227Ac by particle scavenging revealed in this study should be considered when using 227Ac as a tracer of mixing rates in the ocean. Key Points: The high‐resolution measurement of 227Ac with our Mn‐fiber mooring method agrees very well with the onboard Mn‐fiber filtration methodSignificantly high 227Ac activities, which might originate from the 227Ac‐enriched shelf water, are observed in the surface layer (0–100 m)High 227Ac scavenging rates are calculated based on the increasing trend of 228Ra to 227Ac ratio with depth in the upper layer (0–1,000 m) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Humid and cold forest connections in South America between the eastern Andes and the southern Atlantic coast during the LGM.
- Author
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Pinaya, Jorge Luiz Diaz, Pitman, Nigel C. A., Cruz, Francisco William, Akabane, Thomas K., Lopez, Maria del Carmen Sanz, Pereira-Filho, Augusto José, Grohman, Carlos H., Reis, Luiza Santos, Rodrigues, Erika S. Ferreira, Ceccantini, Gregório C. T., and De Oliveira, Paulo Eduardo
- Subjects
- *
LAST Glacial Maximum , *FOSSIL plants , *ECOLOGICAL niche , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *PHYTOGEOGRAPHY , *GROUND vegetation cover - Abstract
The presence of Andean plant genera in moist forests of the Brazilian Atlantic Coast has been historically hypothesized as the result of cross-continental migrations starting at the eastern Andean flanks. Here we test hypotheses of former connections between the Atlantic and Andean forests by examining distribution patterns of selected cool and moist-adapted plant arboreal taxa present in 54 South American pollen records of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), ca. 19–23 cal ka, known to occur in both plant domains. Pollen taxa studied include Araucaria, Drimys, Hedyosmum, Ilex, Myrsine, Podocarpus, Symplocos, Weinmannia, Myrtaceae, Ericaceae and Arecaceae. Past connectivity patterns between these two neotropical regions as well as individual ecological niches during the LGM were explored by cluster analysis of fossil assemblages and modern plant distributions. Additionally, we examined the ecological niche of 137 plant species with shared distributions between the Andes and coastal Brazil. Our results revealed five complex connectivity patterns for South American vegetation linking Andean, Amazonian and Atlantic Forests and one disjunction distribution in southern Chile. This study also provides a better understanding of vegetation cover on the large and shallow South American continental shelf that was exposed due to a global sea level drop. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. From ocean science to sustainable blue economy.
- Author
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Nayak, Shailesh
- Subjects
- *
BLUE economy , *NATURAL resources , *OCEAN energy resources , *OCEAN zoning , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *MARINE fishes , *OCEAN mining , *MARINE sciences - Abstract
Blue economic development to improve the quality of life of people while ensuring inclusive social development as well as environmental and ecological security. India has committed to advancing the blue economy. The knowledge about fishery resources, sea bed, marine minerals and energy resources and vulnerability to natural hazards is a pre-requisite for the growth and development of the blue economy. The marine fish catch has been a major source of income for one million fishers in India. The technological development for product development to be addressed for commercialization of deep-sea fishery. Geophysical surveys have provided information about coastal placer minerals, gas hydrates on continental shelf and manganese nodules, hydrothermal systems and cobalt crusts in high seas. The investment in developing technologies and human resources for harnessing these resources is being made. The coastal and marine area spatial planning to be employed to understand risks involved and accordingly, developmental activities to be planned. The economic growth prospects beyond 2030 will be limited without large investments in ocean environments. An accounting system to be developed to bring together disparate data sources, both economic and environmental. An institutional framework for implementing activities related to blue economy to be set up. Investments in sustainable development of oceans will pay rich dividends for future generations and benefit humanity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Coastal bathymetry in central Dronning Maud Land controls ice shelf stability.
- Author
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Eisermann, H., Eagles, G., and Jokat, W.
- Subjects
- *
ICE prevention & control , *ICE shelves , *SEA ice , *BATHYMETRY , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *SEA level - Abstract
Knowledge of the bathymetry of Antarctica's margins is crucial for models and interpretations of ice-ocean interactions and their influence on ongoing and future sea level change, but remains patchy where ice shelves and multi-year sea ice block measurements. Here, we present a bathymetric model for the central Dronning Maud Land margin, based on a constrained inversion of airborne gravity data. It shows the cavities beneath the region's two ice shelves to be much deeper than in existing bathymetric compilations, but to be shielded from Warm Deep Water ingress and basal melting by the presence of shallow bathymetric sills along the continental shelf. Over areas of multi-year sea ice, the model returns bathymetric estimates of similar accuracy to gravity interpolation-based methods over open water. Airborne gravity thus presents an opportunity to bathymetrically map hundreds of thousands of square kilometres of the most inaccessible margins of Antarctica at resolutions adequate for regional and global oceanographic and glaciological modelling and interpretation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Continental shelf incised valleys as a key to shelf evolution during Quaternary in the Western South Atlantic.
- Author
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Santos Filho, João Regis dos, Figueiredo Jr, Alberto Garcia, Carneiro, Juliane Castro, Dias, Gilberto Tavares de Macedo, Ramalho, Allan Soares, and Hercos, Cizia Mara
- Subjects
- *
CONTINENTAL shelf , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *VALLEYS , *SEDIMENTARY basins - Abstract
Shelf-incised valleys, carved by ancient rivers and estuaries during periods of continental shelf exposure, were primarily shaped by base-level fluctuations in the Quaternary. These geological features are prevalent in the western South Atlantic shelf but often go unnoticed as key indicators of the region's evolution. This research unveils the outcomes of a comprehensive investigation that combined sub-bottom profiling (SBP) surveys, historical bathymetric data, and the application of Geographic Information System (GIS) tools to extract drainage patterns within the Santos Basin, a significant sedimentary basin in Brazil.The study provides an unprecedented overview of the interconnected network of the ancient drainage system across the continental shelf, totalizing 91 thalwegs associated with 80 incised valleys in the study area, ranging in length from 250 m to 148 km. This connection between the mapped incised valleys and the upper slope evolved through three distinct phases during the Late Pleistocene. The first phase (Phase A) was characterized by the formation and subsequent destruction of incised valleys, driven by high-frequency sea-level oscillations during MIS5. The second phase (Phase B, with subphases B1 and B2) witnessed the construction of incised valleys during a period of forced regression at MIS4 and MIS3. The final phase (Phase C) marked the establishment of fully developed valleys, connecting them to upper slope canyons during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The correlation of these sea-level changes with the presence of underfilled incised valleys in the Santos Basin shelf represents a significant breakthrough in understanding the geological history of the western South Atlantic shelf. These valleys typically eroded until reaching depths near the transient base level, offering a valuable glimpse into the geological chronicles of sea-level fluctuations over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Substantial kelp detritus exported beyond the continental shelf by dense shelf water transport.
- Author
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van der Mheen, Mirjam, Wernberg, Thomas, Pattiaratchi, Charitha, Pessarrodona, Albert, Janekovic, Ivica, Simpkins, Taylor, Hovey, Renae, and Filbee-Dexter, Karen
- Subjects
- *
DETRITUS , *KELPS , *CARBON sequestration , *CONTINENTAL shelf - Abstract
Kelp forests may contribute substantially to ocean carbon sequestration, mainly through transporting kelp carbon away from the coast and into the deep sea. However, it is not clear if and how kelp detritus is transported across the continental shelf. Dense shelf water transport (DSWT) is associated with offshore flows along the seabed and provides an effective mechanism for cross-shelf transport. In this study, we determine how effective DSWT is in exporting kelp detritus beyond the continental shelf edge, by considering the transport of simulated sinking kelp detritus from a region of Australia's Great Southern Reef. We show that DSWT is the main mechanism that transports simulated kelp detritus past the continental shelf edge, and that export is negligible when DSWT does not occur. We find that 51% per year of simulated kelp detritus is transported past the continental shelf edge, or 17–29% when accounting for decomposition while in transit across the shelf. This is substantially more than initial global estimates. Because DSWT occurs in many mid-latitude locations around the world, where kelp forests are also most productive, export of kelp carbon from the coast could be considerably larger than initially expected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Networks of geometrically coherent faults accommodate Alpine tectonic inversion offshore southwestern Iberia.
- Author
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Alves, Tiago M.
- Subjects
- *
THRUST belts (Geology) , *CONTINENTAL slopes , *EARTHQUAKE magnitude , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *TSUNAMIS , *EARTHQUAKES , *TSUNAMI damage , *FOLDS (Geology) - Abstract
The structural styles and magnitudes of Alpine tectonic inversion are reviewed for the Atlantic margin of southwestern (SW) Iberia, a region known for its historical earthquakes, tsunamis and associated geohazards. Reprocessed, high-quality 2D seismic data provide new images of tectonic faults, which were mapped to a depth exceeding 10 km for the first time. A total of 26 of these faults comprise syn-rift structures accommodating vertical uplift and horizontal advection (shortening) during Alpine tectonics. At the regional scale, tectonic reactivation has been marked by (a) the exhumation of parts of the present-day continental shelf, (b) local folding and thrusting of strata at the foot of the continental slope, and (c) oversteepening of syn- and post-rift sequences near reactivated faults (e.g. "passive uplift"). This work proves, for the first time, that geometric coherence dominated the growth and linkage of the 26 offshore faults mapped in SW Iberia; therefore, they are prone to reactivate as a kinematically coherent fault network. They form 100–250 km long structures, the longest of which may generate earthquakes with a momentum magnitude (Mw) of 8.0. Tectonic inversion started in the Late Cretaceous, and its magnitude is greater close to where magmatic intrusions are identified. In contrast to previous models, this work postulates that regions in which Late Mesozoic magmatism was more intense comprise thickened, harder crust and form lateral buttresses to northwest–southeast compression. It shows these structural buttresses to have promoted the development of early stage fold-and-thrust belts – typical of convergent margins – in two distinct sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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