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1 accounted for the highest fraction of OA in marine (37 +/- 4%) and mixed air (31 +/- 3%), overriding
4 roduction efficiency of OHDCA was highest in marine air, related to the presence of sulfur dioxide an
7 be made globally in germline preservation of marine algal species via germplasm banking with an overv
8 two new class-level lineages of free-living marine anaerobic ciliates, Muranotrichea, cl. nov. and P
11 ause (1) they feed on a higher proportion of marine and higher trophic level prey, (2) they have high
12 very of methane (CH(4)) accumulation in oxic marine and limnic waters has redefined the role of aquat
13 Pd/Ir, Pt/Ir and Pt/Rh ratios are similar to marine and terrestrial sediments at the ETE, and very di
14 carbon isotope excursions (CIEs) recorded in marine and terrestrial sediments attest to the input of
18 ivities of these traits, which suggests that marine animals are under strong selection for the tolera
19 of the resulting physiological tolerances of marine animals predicts a variety of geographical niches
20 and XPS has been documented for a variety of marine animals, but principally those that feed at the s
24 Modelling supports the idea that widespread marine anoxia was induced by a greenhouse-driven weather
25 celled photosynthetic organisms that inhabit marine, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, diatoms cont
27 ages in cultures of the dominant lineages of marine bacteria has contributed to an ongoing debate ove
31 e evolutionary relationship to the Antarctic marine bacterium Marinomonas sp. BSw10506 and the sub an
32 we identified and characterized an AHGD from marine bacterium Vibrio variabilis JCM 19239 (VvAHGD).
34 ght to have caused grounding-line retreat of marine-based sectors of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS)(1-
35 n coincided with a similar transition in the marine benthic delta(18)O record for global ice volume a
43 Here, we report a reference genome for the marine biofilm-forming diatom Seminavis robusta, showing
47 Proteins and peptides account for 20-75% of marine biota biomass, of which a major fraction is metab
53 ted, and it shows a combination of primitive marine chelicerate and derived arachnid characteristics.
54 to the 16-cell stage of the Ciona embryo, a marine chordate and performed a computational search for
56 c consortium associated to the psychrophilic marine ciliate Euplotes focardii, endemic of the Antarct
57 a transect taken from a naturally occurring marine CO(2) seep in Levante Bay of the Aeolian island o
58 key primary producers of cold and temperate marine coastal ecosystems and exhibit systemic defences
60 in the austral summer of 2010-2011, exposing marine communities to summer seawater temperatures 2-5 d
63 trate seasonal mismatches in the exposure of marine consumers to low pH and algal resource identity d
66 the deep-set sector (~250 m) suggesting that marine debris observer reporting focused in this sector
69 in DWRT; and higher total omega-3 and total marine-derived omega-3 PUFAs with less decline in DSST.
71 orthwest Coast, which indicated a pronounced marine diet for Tseshaht dogs and, presumably, their hum
74 , allowing us to detect the state of a given marine ecosystem based on the dynamics of its curve shap
75 Categorizing ichthyoplankton dynamics across marine ecosystem in the Northeast Pacific can help eluci
79 blooms are important features of productive marine ecosystems and are known to support higher trophi
82 The threat posed by plastic pollution to marine ecosystems and human health is under increasing s
86 affects how well countries with species-rich marine ecosystems can scientifically explore those resou
89 al development is increasing the exposure of marine ecosystems to nighttime light pollution, but is a
90 ensure the sustainability and resilience of marine ecosystems while integrating and balancing differ
92 can have severe and long-lasting impacts on marine ecosystems, fisheries and associated services.
93 systems, but remain poorly resolved for many marine ecosystems, particularly those within in coastal
94 y colonised a series of ecological niches in marine ecosystems, producing textbook examples of conver
95 programs for improving our understanding of marine ecosystems, with the goal of informing policy and
103 three PFAAs are ranked among the top 5% for marine ecotoxicity, when compared to 3104 chemicals in t
104 Our results indicate the PN emissions from marine engines may remain relatively high regardless of
105 a growing recognition of the dynamism of the marine environment as well as new questions about how th
106 se exploitation of a warmer, more productive marine environment by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers drove
107 s in international waters and protecting the marine environment from the harmful effects of mining.
109 DGT samplers were deployed in the near-shore marine environment of East Antarctica around the operati
111 of the thousands of pollutants reaching the marine environment though wastewater discharges from coa
112 nforce the need to prevent PCBs entering the marine environment to ensure that levels continue to dec
113 ics (MPs) are ubiquitous contaminants of the marine environment, and the deep seafloor is their ultim
114 , Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, Oldenburg-complex molecular mixtures
115 lastics are ubiquitous pollutants within the marine environment, predominantly (>90%) accumulating in
116 role of sponge microbiomes in the Antarctic marine environment, where sponges may dominate the benth
121 across a spectrum of approaches, to counter marine environmental extremes, reveals a lack preparedne
123 ever, few of these studies were conducted in marine environments, and almost no work extended beyond
131 that the policies investing capital in local marine fisheries or agricultural sectors achieve income
132 We analyzed annual range edge dynamics of marine fishes-both at the individual species level and p
135 vironment, from ecotoxicity and new links in marine food webs to the fate of the plastics in the wate
138 ross oxygen sink comprising about a third of marine gross oxygen production, and a net oxygen sink am
139 eing concentrated in particular locations by marine habitat features, ocean physical processes, and i
141 growing frequency of extreme events such as marine heat waves increases the urgency to consider miti
143 th long-term (2006-2016) change and a recent marine heatwave (2014-2016) associated with two atmosphe
144 r synthesis identifies commonalities between marine heatwave characteristics and seasonality, links t
146 de Marine Protected Areas before and after a marine heatwave using a kelp forest fish community datas
147 show an extreme heat content event (i.e., a marine heatwave) in coastal waters of the northern Gulf
148 ccurrence of extreme climate events, such as marine heatwaves (MHWs), has resulted in substantial eco
151 igh-temperature extreme events in the ocean, marine heatwaves, can have severe and long-lasting impac
152 is may be especially important for calcified marine herbivores, such as the pinto abalone (Haliotis k
154 Polar blue carbon increases with losses of marine ice over high latitude continental shelf areas.
156 , our results demonstrate that well-designed marine infrastructure and processes used to support the
163 t, on average, 22% of terrestrial and 13% of marine island areas are under protection status, but tha
165 nce of human occupancy dating to ca. 400 ka (Marine Isotope Stage 11), is one of the very few Middle
166 eamounts have been identified as hotspots of marine life in the Azores, acting as feeding stations fo
169 ow that ID MMEs have been reported in 14% of marine mammal species (95% CI 9%-21%), with 72% (n = 36;
170 s) have not been reported ubiquitously among marine mammal species, indicating that intrinsic (host)
172 ales, and likely other ice-associated Arctic marine mammals, will cope with changes in Arctic sea ice
174 oniopropionate (DMSP) is a globally abundant marine metabolite and a significant source of organic ca
175 isotopically depleted carbon source, such as marine methane clathrates, is therefore not required.
180 Viruses that infect microorganisms dominate marine microbial communities numerically, with impacts r
181 cant source of organic carbon and sulfur for marine microbial ecosystems with the potential to influe
182 ose, suggesting expansins evolved in ancient marine microorganisms long before the evolution of land
183 standing of the fate and behavior of typical marine microplastics, these findings serve as a fundamen
186 ng success) and metabolic rate of a keystone marine mollusc, the sea hare Stylocheilus striatus, a sp
191 ns, have revolutionized our understanding of marine N(2) fixation and its role in the global nitrogen
192 yse empirical data from terrestrial (n = 4), marine (n = 25) and freshwater (n = 13) environments and
195 rbia plants and regarding the discovery of a marine natural product, revealing biological insights at
199 res, and distribution strongly influenced by marine nutrient inputs, with 60% of blooms less than 5 k
208 impacts of direct and indirect stressors on marine organisms, and multi-stressor studies of their co
209 A (eDNA) is increasingly used for monitoring marine organisms; however, offshore sampling and time la
210 pancy between the samples of terrestrial and marine origins was found, indicating that marine samples
214 In the nutrient-rich region surrounding marine phytoplankton cells, heterotrophic bacterioplankt
215 mentally manipulated the species richness of marine phytoplankton communities under a range of warmin
216 endent than photosynthesis across 18 diverse marine phytoplankton, resulting in universal declines in
218 ultiple natural and experimental ecosystems (marine plankton, intertidal mollusks, and deciduous fore
221 idering the transboundary nature of both the marine plastic litter problem and the ecosystem services
222 d States (US) to lead to negative impacts on marine populations and support consumption of products f
224 xamine how the reproductive success of a top marine predator is being affected by ecosystem change.
225 ocean, which in turn might have impacted the marine primary productivity and organic carbon burial.
228 this growth was driven by long-term enhanced marine production conditioned by the Holocene Thermal Ma
231 ted areas and ongoing efforts to establish a Marine Protected Area along the Peninsula, a key fishing
232 e driven community shifts inside and outside Marine Protected Areas before and after a marine heatwav
233 managers in many locations have established marine protected areas or seasonal closures to recover t
234 biodiversity and temperature changes in the marine realm, where species richness mostly increases wi
235 itude annually-resolved and absolutely dated marine record spanning the last millennium, and the Pale
236 s, including cartilaginous and bony fish and marine reptiles, from northern Gulf of Mexico - located
238 protected deep-water areas in the Galapagos Marine Reserve that may help preserve these unique commu
239 sted, but the groups of fish benefiting from marine reserves profoundly changed, with low trophic lev
241 Our results indicate that small networks of marine reserves yield previously unrecognized stabilizin
245 crobial resistance in bacteria isolated from marine salmon farms, but much less attention has been pa
246 nd marine origins was found, indicating that marine samples are better represented by ESI than terres
249 an 40 degrees C account for roughly half the marine sediment volume, but the processes mediated by mi
251 ) have been reported in both terrestrial and marine sediments associated with the end-Triassic mass e
252 Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding of marine sediments has revealed large amounts of sequences
253 shows that the planktonic eDNA preserved in marine sediments has the potential to record climatic an
255 lustrating that it took place on the shallow marine shelf coevally with deeper water, below-wave base
256 t subglacial meltwater forms morainal banks (marine shoals) or ice-contact deltas that reduce water d
257 i values, which can explain anomalies in the marine Si budget like in the Cascadia Basin and which ha
259 ificantly to marine snow formation, and that marine snow composed of elongated phytoplankton cells ca
261 ing velocity can contribute significantly to marine snow formation, and that marine snow composed of
262 study has therefore evolved current natural marine snow protocols to generate 'artificial' marine sn
263 rine snow protocols to generate 'artificial' marine snow, into which bacteria can be incorporated to
267 nnectivity is an essential consideration for marine spatial planning of competing interests in the de
269 As a result, the risk of harmful non-native marine species being introduced into this critical regio
272 f abundance trends of 304 widely distributed marine species over the last century, across a range of
273 dentify the number of commercially exploited marine species that are shared between neighboring natio
274 poxia thus links the biogeography of diverse marine species to fundamental energetic requirements tha
276 ribe unusual trace fossils found in marginal-marine, storm- and river-flood deposits from the Middle
277 se estimated microbial turnover times in the marine subsurface and nitrogen fixation rates in pelagic
278 t is challenging for microbiota that live in marine subsurface sediments or igneous basement to obtai
280 (NPP) accident in 1986 and in freshwater and marine systems after the more recent Fukushima NPP accid
281 preindustrial N budgets for terrestrial and marine systems and their modern-day alteration by N inpu
282 bon sequestration by sediments and vegetated marine systems contributes to atmospheric carbon drawdow
283 To date, metrics of thermal stress within marine systems have focussed on coral communities, and l
284 rewiring of host metabolism, with a focus on marine systems, (ii) consider the range and nature of te
285 importance remain inadequately understood in marine systems, but cues from coastal vegetation can pro
289 freshwater turtle (Trachemys scripta) and a marine turtle (Caretta caretta) via analysis of small bl
290 severity of gaseous embolism (GE) and DCS in marine turtles after incidental capture in trawl gear, a
291 board and post-release mortality of bycaught marine turtles that has until now been unaccounted for i
295 a change in tissue expression from gills, in marine vertebrates, to kidneys in terrestrial vertebrate
297 bon and sulfur reflect dietary source (e.g., marine vs terrestrial) and the nitrogen trophic level.
299 green seaweed hydrolysates and seawater with marine yeast Wickerhamomyces anomalus M15 produced 48.24