Search results for "WATER COLUMN"

showing 10 items of 123 documents

The effect of Ruppia cirrhosa features on macroalgae and suspended matter in a Mediterranean shallow system

2006

Relationships among chemical–physical features, total gross suspended organic matter, coverage of the seagrass Ruppia cirrhosa and its associated algal community in eight ponds of a saltworks system of western Sicily (Mediterranean Sea) were investigated in spring and summer 2004. All biological features varied both at different levels of seagrass coverage and between seasons. A low algal diversity (46 taxa, 14.75 ± 1.41 on average) was highlighted; algal coverage and species richness showed to be negatively correlated. Ruppia cirrhosa coverage was negatively correlated with algal coverage, but positively correlated with species richness. Moreover, a significant correlation among R. cirrhos…

Mediterranean climateChlorophyll aEcologybiologyEcologyAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundMediterranean seaSeagrassWater columnchemistryRuppia cirrhosaMacroalgae Ruppia cirrhosa saltworks seagrass suspended organic matterEnvironmental scienceSpecies richnessSuspended matterEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Fine stratification of microbial communities through a metagenomic profile of the photic zone

2017

ABSTRACTMost marine metagenomic studies of the marine photic zone analyze only samples taken at one or two depths. However, when the water column is stratified, physicochemical parameters change dramatically over relatively short depth intervals. We sampled the photic water column every 15m depth at a single point of an off-shore Mediterranean site during a period of strong stratification (early autumn) to evaluate the effects of small depth increases on the microbiome. Using genomic assembly and metagenomic read recruitment, we found major shifts in the community structure over small variations of depth, with most microbes showing a distribution limited to layers approximately 30 meters th…

Mediterranean climateSphingomonadaceaePaleontologyWater columnbiologyMetagenomicsCommunity structureStratification (water)Photic zoneMicrobiomebiology.organism_classification
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Changes in behavioural response of Mediterranean Seabass (Dicenthratus labrax L.) under different feeding distributions

2009

Captive-induced behavioural deviations may involve many aspects of fish behaviour such as swimming activity and enhancement of individual aggressiveness. We studied seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) behaviour as a function of manual and automatic feeding distribution modes. Under manual mode, the food is distributed over an extended area for a longer period, and its precise location is not always predictable, while with pneumatic automatic feeders, fish receive the same amount of resource, which is concentrated in the same surface area over a shorter period. We compared seabass behaviour under automatic and manual conditions collecting video image recordings before, during, and after feeding d…

Mediterranean climatebiology040301 veterinary sciencesEcologyCaptivity Dicentrarchus labrax Behaviour Welfare Mediterranean Sea0402 animal and dairy scienceZoologyCaptivityAquatic animal04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesCaptivity Dicentrarchus labrax Behaviour Welfare Mediterranean Sea.biology.organism_classification040201 dairy & animal science0403 veterinary scienceWater columnSwimming behaviourAgonistic behaviourAnimal Science and ZoologyDicentrarchuslcsh:Animal cultureMorninglcsh:SF1-1100
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Environmental Constraints on Pathways of Organic Detritus in a Semi-enclosed Marine System (W-Mediterranean)

2001

In order to assess seasonal and spatial changes in water-sediment interaction processes in a semi-enclosed marine system of Western Sicily (Marsala lagoon; W-Mediterranean), the biochemical composition of suspended and sediment organic matter was studied, during a one-year sampling period. The observed dynamic balance of resuspension vs. sedimentation processes and the macroalgal and vascular plant coverage appear major factors in affecting both amounts and biochemical composition of suspended and sedimentary organic matter and allowed us to identify two different sub-systems. The northern area, characterised by frequent wind-induced sediment resuspension events and by a scant vegetation, d…

Mediterranean climatechemistry.chemical_classificationWater columnchemistryEnvironmental chemistryHeterotrophSedimentary organic matterDetritus (geology)SedimentOrganic matterSedimentationGeomorphologyGeology
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Toxic cyanobacterial blooms in reservoirs under a semiarid Mediterranean climate: the magnification of a problem

2007

Sicilian reservoirs constitute the most important water resources available on the island. During summer 2001, the intense water utilization of Lake Arancio reservoir reduced the water level significantly. This coincided with the formation of intense blooms formed by the microcystin-producing cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa. During summer 2003, Lake Arancio was continuously filled and the vertical stratification of the water column was maintained, resulting in 5-6 fold lower cell numbers of Microcystis aeruginosa. For both years a significant linear relationship between microcystin net production and Microcysytis cell division was observed, implying that Microcystis cell numbers can b…

Mediterranean climatemicrocystinMicrocystisMicrocystinsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisClimateBacterial ToxinsFresh WaterMicrocystinManagement Monitoring Policy and LawToxicologyCyanobacteriaArticleenvironmental managementWater columnMicrocystispolycyclic compoundsMicrocystis aeruginosaMicrocystis aeruginosaSicilychemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyEcologyMediterranean Regionrisk assessmentPlanktothrix rubescenGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationWater levelWater resourceschemistryEnvironmental scienceSeasonsBloomEnvironmental Monitoring
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Impact on the water column biogeochemistry of a Mediterranean mussel and fish farm

2002

We investigated and compared the impact of organic loads due to the biodeposition of mussel and fish farms on the water column of a coastal area of the Tyrrhenian Sea (Western Mediterranean). Physico-chemical data (including oxygen, nutrients, DOC and particulate organic matter), microbial variables (picoplankton and picophytoplankton density and biomass) and phytoplankton biomass (as chlorophyll-a) were determined on a monthly basis from March 1997 to February 1998. The results of this study indicate that both fish farm and mussel culture did not alter significantly dissolved inorganic phosphorus and chlorophyll-a values, while inorganic nitrogen concentrations were higher in mussel farm a…

Mediterranean musselChlorophyllSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaEnvironmental Engineeringanimal structuresNitrogenFish farmingPopulation DynamicsAquacultureAquaculture impactWater columnPhytoplanktonDissolved organic carbonMediterranean SeaAnimalsWater PollutantsBiomassPicoplanktonWaste Management and DisposalPicoplanktonWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringEarth-Surface ProcessesBiomass (ecology)biologyEcologyEcological ModelingChlorophyll AfungiFishesPhosphorusFish farmMusselbiology.organism_classificationPlanktonPollutionBivalviaMussel and Fish farmEnvironmental chemistryMussel farmEnvironmental scienceDissolved organic carbonEnvironmental Monitoring
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Phototrophic Fe(II)-oxidation in the chemocline of a ferruginous meromictic lake

2014

Precambrian Banded Iron Formation (BIF) deposition was conventionally attributed to the precipitation of iron-oxides resulting from the abiotic reaction of ferrous iron (Fe(II)) with photosynthetically produced oxygen. Earliest traces of oxygen date from 2.7 Ga, thus raising questions as to what may have caused BIF precipitation before oxygenic photosynthesis evolved. The discovery of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria thriving through the oxidation of Fe(II) has provided support for a biological origin for some BIFs, but despite reports suggesting that anoxygenic phototrophs may oxidize Fe(II) in the environment, a model ecosystem of an ancient ocean where they are demonstrably active was la…

Microbiology (medical)cryptic sulfur cyclingbiologyPhototrophEcologyanoxygenic photosynthesislcsh:QR1-502early life evolutionChlorobiumbiology.organism_classificationChemoclineAnoxygenic photosynthesisAnoxic watersMicrobiologylcsh:MicrobiologyFerrousWater column13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistrybanded iron formationBanded iron formationOriginal Research ArticlegeomicrobiologyFrontiers in Microbiology
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Genetic and Environmental Controls on Nitrous Oxide Accumulation in Lakes

2015

We studied potential links between environmental factors, nitrous oxide (N2O) accumulation, and genetic indicators of nitrite and N2O reducing bacteria in 12 boreal lakes. Denitrifying bacteria were investigated by quantifying genes encoding nitrite and N2O reductases (nirS/nirK and nosZ, respectively, including the two phylogenetically distinct clades nosZ(I) and nosZ(II)) in lake sediments. Summertime N2O accumulation and hypolimnetic nitrate concentrations were positively correlated both at the inter-lake scale and within a depth transect of an individual lake (Lake Vanajavesi). The variability in the individual nirS, nirK, nosZ(I), and nosZ(II) gene abundances was high (up to tenfold) a…

Nitrite ReductasesDenitrificationEND-PRODUCTNitrous Oxidelcsh:MedicineDenitrifying bacteriachemistry.chemical_compoundWater columnBacterial ProteinsNitrateEcosystemNitritelcsh:ScienceEcosystemta1191172 Environmental sciencesMultidisciplinaryBacteriaChemistryEcologyMICROBIAL COMMUNITYlcsh:RN2OLake ecosystemta1182NATURAL WATERSGene Expression Regulation BacterialDENITRIFICATIONequipment and suppliesSOILSLakesDENITRIFYING BACTERIA13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistrylcsh:QSeasonsHypolimnionOxidoreductasesWater MicrobiologyRIBOSOMAL-RNAnitrous oxide (N2O) accumulationResearch ArticleNOSZ GENESNITRATE
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Metagenomic insights into strategies of aerobic and anaerobic carbon and nitrogen transformation in boreal lakes

2015

Thousands of net-heterotrophic and strongly stratifying lakes dominate the boreal landscape. Besides their central role as emitters of greenhouse gases, we have only recently begun to understand the microbial systems driving the metabolic processes and elemental cycles in these lakes. Using shotgun metagenomics, we show that the functional potential differs among lake types, with humic lakes being particularly enriched in carbon degradation genes. Most of the metabolic pathways exhibit oxygen- and temperature-dependent stratification over depth, coinciding with shifts in bacterial community composition, implying that stratification is a major factor controlling lake metabolism. In the botto…

Nitrogenta1172boreal lakesOceanografi hydrologi och vattenresurserBiologymicrobial ecologyArticleBacteria AnaerobicOceanography Hydrology and Water ResourcesWater columncarbon cyclenitrogen cycleCompounds of carbon14. Life underwaterAutotrophNitrogen cyclechemistry.chemical_classificationmetagenomicsMultidisciplinaryEcologyhiilen kiertota1183WaterAnoxic waters6. Clean waterCarbonBacteria AerobicOxygenmikrobiekologiaLakeschemistryBoreal13. Climate actionMetagenomicsGreenhouse gasta1181Water Microbiology
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ON THE WAVE-U-OWC INTERACTION IN A NUMERICAL 2D WAVE FLUME

Several wave energy conversion techniques have been patented all over the world. Despite this large variation in design, the Wave Energy Converters (WECs) are generally categorized by location, type and modes of operation. An Oscillating Water Column consists of a chamber with an opening to the sea below the water line. An OWC consists of a box with a big vertical opening in the front wall. Waves enter through this opening with only some small diffraction effects from the front wall (and they propagate on the water surface in the box. On the roof of the box there is a tube connecting the atmosphere with the air pocket enclosed between the water surface and the roof. This tube contains one o…

Oscillating Water Column Volume of Fluid CDF eigenperiod resonanceSettore ICAR/01 - Idraulica
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