150 research outputs found
Contribution of marine zooplankton time series to the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development
Zooplankton play a central role in marine trophic webs, influencing both biogeochemistry and productivity of the oceans. Changes in their
communities are important indicators of overall ecosystem health and global change impacts. With increasing exploitation and pressures on the
marine environment, there is a growing need for high-resolution monitoring of marine zooplankton to provide detailed information about seasonal
to decadal changes at local, regional, and global scales. This crucial knowledge is gathered mainly through long-term time series, which are key to
characterizing and forecasting changes in marine zooplankton assemblages. In this Introduction, and through the articles included in this Themed
Article Set, we bring together new insights, issuing from data time series, into zooplankton population dynamics.We also take up the application
of such time series to the understanding of global change impacts on marine ecosystems and in providing advice on sustainable management
of marine ecosystem resources and services. We highlight the importance of maintaining and supporting long-term marine zooplankton time
series as key contributors to the development and advancement of the United Nations’ Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development
Goal 13-Climate action and Goal 14-Life below water.Versión del editor2,27
PICES/ICES collaborative research initiative: Toward regional to global measurements and comparisons of zooplankton production using existing data sets
Individual growth rate (IGR) and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (AARS) activity as individual-based indicators of growth rate of North Pacific krill, Euphausia pacifica
We investigated aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (AARS) activity and individual growth rate (IGR) as individual-based in situ indicators of growth in adult krill, Euphausia pacifica. AARS enzymes catalyze the first step in protein synthesis while the IGR method is based on changes in body length during molting. Growth rates of field-collected krill were measured via the IGR method and individuals were subsequently preserved for AARS analysis to yield paired measurements. Our results show that conditions during the IGR incubation period influenced AARS activity in these individuals precluding a direct comparison but revealing the different timescales across which these two measures integrate. Importantly, they show that AARS activity provides a snap-shot image of an organism's metabolism, while IGR of krill is thought to integrate their environmental experience over several days. Each method would require repeated measurements to estimate population growth rates integrated over seasonal or generational time scales. As part of this project, we investigated how specific the AARS assay is to protein synthesis by testing a modified protocol that includes an additional blank and found evidence that the current assay may be measuring other cellular processes in addition to its intended signal. Our results suggest that a new NADH Blank might be optimized to improve the specificity of the assay.Postprint2,26
The effect of a strong warm winter on subtropical zooplankton biomass and metabolism
Winter 2010 was the warmest of the last 30 years in the subtropical oceanic waters north of the Canary Islands. Sea surface temperature was always above 19°C, promoting a strong stratification and preventing the expected late winter bloom. The knowledge of how planktonic organisms respond to such a warm scenario is of paramount importance to predict the effect of future ocean changes. In this study, zooplankton biomass and gut fluorescence (GF), electron transport system (ETS) activity, and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (AARS) activity were measured as proxies of metabolism in the oceanic waters north of the Canary Islands during the winter–spring period of 2010. Mesozooplankton biomass, GF, and ETS activity showed lower values compared with previous studies in the area under normal winter conditions. However, relatively higher than expected mesozooplankton biomass was observed during the normal postbloom period in these waters, and AARS activities were relatively high throughout the period studied. This apparent paradox could be tentatively explained by the observed inputs of dust deposition from the Sahara desert. Our findings show how warming and dust events may interact, affecting the zooplankton biomass and metabolism in these subtropical waters
Are we missing a mesopelagic-demersal coupling?
Despite demersal trawling monitoring programs are not aimed at quantifying mesopelagic organisms, they are recurrently captured as by catch between 30 and 800 m depth. These species are mostly diel vertical migrants, with differentiated behavior from benthic and demersal ones. Nevertheless, they are sometimes captured in large quantities (both abundance and biomass) although absent on other occasions. The co-occurrence observed with demersal populations may probably be due to the daytime and location of samplings, i.e. depth and type of bottom (habitat). In order to understand the mesopelagic-demersal coupling, we discuss spatio-temporal patterns observed along the Spanish Mediterranean coast during the 1994-2012 MEDITS survey.FEM
Horizontal distribution of deep sea microplankton: A new point of view for marine biogeography.
An investigation on microplankton composition and spatial distribution has been carried
out around Italian seas. The analysis of 53 samples, collected in 2017 at two depths in 27 different
stations, has led to a scenario of horizontal distribution of microplankton. Dinophyta and Ciliophora
were chosen as representatives of the whole microplankton community. A total of 60 genera were
identified. Cluster analysis of data regarding taxa presence and abundance led us to recognize that
similarities between surface stations were more evident than those between deep ones. Furthermore,
we conducted an inter-annual comparison with available data from the South Adriatic Sea (2013,
2015). The higher dissimilarity between deep sea samples was also confirmed in a relatively smaller
geographic area. The dissimilarity of deep-sea samples does not correspond to a higher habitat
diversification, in terms of abiotic parameters. It has been suggested that the negligible biological
connectivity in the deep, for those micro-organisms not able to perform wide spatial migrations,
could produce such a biological diversificatio
Report of the JRC’s Descriptor 5 workshop to support the review of the Commission Decision 2010/477/EU concerning MSFD criteria for assessing Good Environmental Status
The MSFD workshop on eutrophication (D5), held in Ispra JRC (29th-30th of September 2015) aimed to provide clear proposals and conclusions on some of the outstanding issues identified in the D5 review manual (May 2015 consultation version: https://circabc.europa.eu/w/browse/ed3cd091-aa56-4f8e-9691-d44bbd666ed5) in the broader context of support to the review of Commission Decision 2010/477/EU. This report is complementing the Commission Decision 2010/477/EU review manual (JRC96900) and presents the result of the scientific and technical review concluding phase 1 of the review of the Commission Decision 2010/477/EU in relation to Descriptor 5. The review has been carried out by the EC JRC together with experts nominated by EU Member States, and has considered contributions from the GES Working Group in accordance with the roadmap set out in the MSFD implementation strategy (agreed on at the 11th CIS MSCG meeting).
The main issues addressed and tackled in this workshop’s report are:
- Criteria and indicators/parameters;
- How to handle coastal waters (i.e. WFD-MSFD overlapping waters);
- Eutrophication assessment frameworks;
- Use of WFD quality standards (GES boundaries) for ecological elements; how are GES boundaries per quality elements set?
- Assessment scales and aggregation rules;
- Initial screening procedures.JRC.H.1 - Water Resource
Criminalización y estigmatización de la protesta feminista en México desde la perspectiva de las colectivas activistas
In recent years, the feminist movement in Mexico has had a greater presence in the public space in various cities of the country. Parallel to this phenomenon, there has been a criminalization and stigmatization of feminist protest in which the State plays an important role, while society and the media play a secondary role. This study includes an analysis of the dynamics in which the collective action of women against the eradication of violence in Mexico has been criminalized and stigmatized by various actors through 11 interviews with Mexican feminist collectives and a Twitter Space on criminalization of protest conducted by "Somos el medio", which is a critical and independent news media on the Internet, produced in March 2022. The main findings point to the diversification of types of criminalization by the State, and of stigmatization by the media and users of socio-digital network sites.En los últimos años, el movimiento feminista en Méjico ha tenido una mayor presencia en el espacio público en diversas ciudades del país. En paralelo a este fenómeno se ha presentado una criminalización y estigmatización de la protesta feminista donde el Estado juega un rol importante, mientras que la sociedad y los medios lo hacen en un segundo momento. El presente estudio comprende un análisis de las dinámicas en las que la acción colectiva de las mujeres contra la erradicación de la violencia en Méjico, ha sido criminalizada y estigmatizada, por diversos actores mediante 11 entrevistas efectuadas a colectivas feministas mexicanas y un Twitter Space sobre criminalización de la protesta realizado por “Somos el medio”, un medio informativo crítico e independiente en Internet, realizado en marzo de 2022. Los principales hallazgos apuntan a la diversificación de los modos de criminalización por parte del Estado, y de la estigmatización por parte de los medios y los usuarios de redes sociodigitales
Ontogenetic Responses of Calanus chilensis to Hypoxia from Northern Chile (23ºS), Humboldt Current Ecosystem
Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems are being subjected to expansion, intensification and shoaling of Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZ's), as a result of ongoing climate change. To understand how dominant epipelagic copepods may respond to stressful conditions induced by low oxygen, we experimentally studied the effect of hypoxia over the stage-specific physiology of Calanus chilensis from the Mejillones Bay (23°S — 70°W), northern Chile, during the winters of 2013 and 2014. Females, eggs and nauplii (NI to NIV) of C. chilensis were incubated under hypoxia (~0.7 mg O2 L-1) and normoxia (~8.3 mg O2 L-1) conditions at a constant temperature of 14ºC as to estimate egg production rate (EPR), hatching success (HS) and naupliar growth and development time. Additionally, we estimated survivorship by using Neutral Red technique, and also examined female metabolism by measuring specific activity of the enzymes Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (spAARS) (growth index) and the electron transport system (spETS) (potential respiration). Survival of females and EPR were not significantly affected by dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions, coinciding with no significant changes in their metabolism. By contrast, HS was reduced from normoxia (70%) to hypoxia (30%), whereas naupliar growth (NI to NIII) was lower under hypoxia (0.155 ± 0.007 d-1) than normoxia (0.237 ± 0.006 d-1), resulting also in a longer development time, 6.490 ± 0.353 d and 4.238 ± 0.149 d, respectively. Most eggs and nauplii collected at the end of the experiments were alive, although a higher proportion of organisms were recovered in normoxia than hypoxia. Our results revealed stage-specific responses to hypoxia in C. chilensis and the importance of ontogenetic responses to variable levels of oxygenation in the upwelling zone
Modeling of a two-step solar hydrogen production plant
The promising advances in research in two-step solar hydrogen production from water have increased interest in producing hydrogen with this technology. In this framework, the Hydrosol II Project pilot plant for producing continuous solar hydrogen from water using a ferrite-based redox technology was erected at the CIEMAT-Plataforma Solar de Almer??a. Two reactors allow the oxidation and reduction steps to be performed in parallel, which, sequentially switched, make hydrogen production quasi-continuous.
A dynamic model of a solar hydrogen production plant has been developed based on experience with this pilot plant. As it was designed as a control algorithm test platform, for practical control issues, some simplifications have been assumed to make the model suitable. The new model includes both a solar field model and a processing plant model and is able to simulate the concentrated solar power received by the reactors and the thermal and chemical reactor behavior. The solar field model and plant thermal behavior were calibrated and validated with experimental data. The numerical predictions show good agreement with measurement data
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