Search results for "antarctic"

showing 10 items of 102 documents

Recent evolution of the multi-isotopic radioactive content in ice of Livingston Island, Antarctica.

1999

The temporal arrangement of the ice layers that are produced in ecosystems with perpetual snows form situations that greatly favour the study of the temporal evolution of the radioactive fallout that occurs in the said zones, whether this fallout is natural or artificial in origin. This allows one to investigate the causes of the fallout and the mechanisms transporting the radionuclides involved from their source point to the study zone, as well as their subsequent behaviour in that zone. There are special difficulties involved in this type of study in Antarctica. Some are of a general character deriving from the conditions of extreme climate and isolation which complicate the processes of …

Radioactive FalloutWater Pollutants RadioactiveTime FactorsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisWater Pollution RadioactiveInduced radioactivityAtollAntarctic RegionsFresh WaterToxicologyLatitudeAtmosphereRadiation MonitoringRadioactive contaminationgeographyRadionuclidegeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyIceNorthern HemisphereGeneral MedicinePollutionOceanographyDeposition (aerosol physics)Environmental scienceScintillation CountingBulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology
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Re-enrichment of cratonic lithospheric mantle beneath an evolving rift: Mantle xenoliths from East Antarctica

2006

RiftMantle wedgeGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth scienceTransition zoneHotspot (geology)GeochemistryEast antarcticaLithospheric mantleGeologyMantle xenolithsGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
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The trophic transfer of persistent pollutants (HCB, DDTs, PCBs) within polar marine food webs.

2017

Biomagnification (increase in contaminant concentrations at successively higher levels of trophic web), is a process that can transversally impair biodiversity and human health. Most research shows that biomagnification should be higher at poles with northern sites having a major tendency to biomagnify Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) through their marine food webs. We investigated the biomagnification degree into two marine trophic webs combining carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes and POP analyses. We showed that the Antarctic trophic web was more depleted than the sub-Arctic one and the differences highlighted for the basal part could explain the difference in length between them. Co…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEnvironmental EngineeringFood Chain010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisBiomagnificationDichlorodiphenyl DichloroethyleneBiodiversityAntarctic Regions010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesBiomagnification; Marine organisms; POPs; Ross Sea; Stable isotopes; Sub-Arctic; Chemistry (all); Environmental ChemistryHuman healthchemistry.chemical_compoundSub arcticRoss SeaMarine organismHexachlorobenzeneEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsSeawaterPOPsMarine organismsStable isotopesBiomagnification0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTrophic levelPollutantCarbon IsotopesNitrogen IsotopesEcologyStable isotope ratioArctic RegionsChemistry (all)Public Health Environmental and Occupational HealthFishesGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryHexachlorobenzenePOPStable isotopePollutionPolychlorinated BiphenylsSub-ArcticchemistryEnvironmental chemistryVertebratesEnvironmental scienceWater Pollutants ChemicalChemosphere
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Horizontal and vertical food web structure drives trace element trophic transfer in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica

2019

Abstract Despite a vast amount of literature has focused on trace element (TE) contamination in Antarctica during the last decades, the assessment of the main pathways driving TE transfer to the biota is still an overlooked issue. This limits the ability to predict how variations in sea-ice dynamics and productivity due to climate change will affect TE allocation in the food web. Here, food web structure of Tethys Bay (Terra Nova Bay, Ross Sea, Antarctica) was first characterised by analysing carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes (δ13C, δ15N) in organic matter sources (sediment and planktonic, benthic and sympagic primary producers) and consumers (zooplankton, benthic invertebrates, fish and …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaFood Chain010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAntarctic Regions010501 environmental sciencesToxicology01 natural sciencesZooplanktonAnimals0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTrophic levelBiomagnificationBiodilutionConsumerMetalFishesPelagic zoneBayes TheoremGeneral Medicineδ15NPlanktonBiotaInvertebratesStable isotopeSympagic algaePollutionFood webTrace ElementsOceanographyBaysBenthic zoneEnvironmental sciencePolarWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Monitoring
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Trace elements and stable isotopes in penguin chicks and eggs: A baseline for monitoring the Ross Sea MPA and trophic transfer studies.

2021

Multi-tissue trace elements (TEs), C, N concentrations and stable isotopes (δ13C, δ15N) of chick carcasses and eggs of Adelie and Emperor penguins were studied to i) provide reference data before the recent institution of the Ross Sea Marine Protected Area (Antarctica), and ii) provide conversion factors that allow estimating C, N, δ13C and δ15N in edible tissues from non-edible ones, thus improving the use of stable isotopes in contamination and trophic transfer studies. Higher concentrations of As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn and Pb were found in chick carcasses than in eggs, suggesting increasing contamination in recent decades and high toxicity risks for penguin consumers. Isotopic conversion fa…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaFood ChainZoologyAntarctic RegionsAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyAntarctica; Aptenodytes forsteri; contamination; food web; internal tissues; Pygoscelis adeliae; animals; Antarctic regions; environmental monitoring; food chain; isotopes; mercury; Spheniscidae; trace elementsContaminationIsotopesAnimalsInternal tissuesTrophic levelδ13CStable isotope ratioBaseline (sea)food and beveragesFood webδ15NMercuryContaminationPollutionAptenodytes forsteriPygoscelis adeliaeSpheniscidaeFood webTrace ElementsAntarcticaMarine protected areaEnvironmental MonitoringMarine pollution bulletin
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Heterogeneous vertical structure of the bacterioplankton community in a non-stratified Antarctic lake

2013

10 páginas, 4 figuras, 2 tablas.

Shetlandgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryBacteriaEcologyBiological stratificationDrainage basinGeologyGlacierBacterioplanktonStratification (vegetation)BiologyOceanographyOceanographyWater columnBenthic zoneSeawaterVertical heterogeneity16S rRNAMaritime Antarctic lakesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAntarctic Science
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Kerguelen, un archipel sous haute surveillance

2016

Avec ses côtes découpées et sans cesse battues par les vents, les Kerguelen sont restées longtemps inaccessibles aux biologistes marins. Si sa situation géographique et son isolement exceptionnels rendent cet archipel particulièrement vulnérable aux changements climatiques, ils en font aussi un laboratoire idéal pour en étudier les effets…

Sub-Antarcticcolonisationtemperaturefront shiftcolonizationscientific divingsuivis à long termeSST[SDE.BE] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologymonitoringplongée scientifiquechangement globalSubantarctiqueglobal change
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The phylogenetic position and taxonomic status of Sterechinus bernasconiae Larrain, 1975 (Echinodermata, Echinoidea), an enigmatic Chilean sea urchin

2015

15 pages; International audience; Sterechinus is a very common echinoid genus in benthic communities of the Southern Ocean. It is widely distributed across the Antarctic and South Atlantic Oceans and has been the most frequently collected and intensively studied Antarctic echinoid. Despite the abundant literature devoted to Sterechinus, few studies have questioned the systematics of the genus. Sterechinus bernasconiae is the only species of Sterechinus reported from the Pacific Ocean and is only known from the few specimens of the original material. Based on new material collected during the oceanographic cruise INSPIRE on board the R/V Melville, the taxonomy and phylogenetic position of th…

SystematicsPhylogenetic treeEcologyBiogeographyEchinoideaBiology[SDV.BID.SPT]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Systematics Phylogenetics and taxonomybiology.organism_classificationSterechinusBiogeographySterechinus neumayeriAntarcticTaxonomy (biology)14. Life underwaterDiademaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesClade[ SDV.BID.SPT ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Systematics Phylogenetics and taxonomyPhylogenySterechinus bernasconiaeGracilechinus multidentatusPolar Biology
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Phylogenetic analysis of the Antarctic genus Oswaldella Stechow, 1919 (Hydrozoa, Leptomedusae, Kirchenpaueriidae)

1999

A cladistic study was carried out on known species of the characteristically Antarctic genus Oswaldella, adopting as out-groups some other genera included in the family Kirchenpaueriidae. The analysis resulted in a cladogram with low CI in which no relationship between genera can be depicted. However, the hypothesis of monophyly of the genus Oswaldella is corroborated, being supported in our cladogram by five synapomorphies (although all are homoplastic with other taxa or reversed within the species of the genus). The basal relationships of the genus are uncertain, but three species groups are distinguishable within Oswaldella: 1) the O. incognita group, 2) the O. Antarctica group, and 3) a…

SystematicsbiologyZoologyOswaldellabiology.organism_classificationCladisticsMonophylyHydrozoaLeptomedusaeCladogramGenusKirchenpaueriidaeAntarcticaAnimal Science and ZoologyKirchenpaueriidaesystematicscladisticsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHydrozoaContributions to Zoology
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Soil fungal community composition does not alter along a latitudinal gradient through the maritime and sub-Antarctic

2012

We investigated the relationships between fungal community composition, latitude and a range of physicochemical parameters in 58 soils sampled from a 2370 km latitudinal gradient between South Georgia (54 S, 38 W) in the sub-Antarctic and Mars Oasis (72 S, 68 W) on Alexander Island in the southern maritime Antarctic. Our study, which is based on approximately ten times the number of samples used in previous similar studies, indicates that latitude and its associated environmental parameters are not related to fungal community composition. Significant changes in the composition of soil fungal communities were observed in relation to gradients of the ratio of total organic carbon to nitrogen,…

Total organic carbonAntarctica C:N ratio Extreme environments Latitudinal gradient pH Soil fungal community composition0303 health sciencesEcology030306 microbiologyRange (biology)EcologyEcological ModelingSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaPlant ScienceMars Exploration Program15. Life on landBiologyLatitude03 medical and health sciencesOceanographyCommunity compositionSoil pHSoil waterExtreme environment14. Life underwaterEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyFungal Ecology
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