Publications by authors named "Christophe E Menkes"

Pacific Ocean tuna is among the most-consumed seafood products but contains relatively high levels of the neurotoxin methylmercury. Limited observations suggest tuna mercury levels vary in space and time, yet the drivers are not well understood. Here, we map mercury concentrations in skipjack tuna across the Pacific Ocean and build generalized additive models to quantify the anthropogenic, ecological, and biogeochemical drivers.

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Global anthropogenic mercury (Hg) emissions to the atmosphere since industrialization are widely considered to be responsible for a significant increase in surface ocean Hg concentrations. Still unclear is how those inputs are converted into toxic methylmercury (MeHg) then transferred and biomagnified in oceanic food webs. We used a unique long-term and continuous dataset to explore the temporal Hg trend and variability of three tropical tuna species (yellowfin, bigeye, and skipjack) from the southwestern Pacific Ocean between 2001 and 2018 (n = 590).

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Considerable uncertainty remains over how increasing atmospheric CO and anthropogenic climate changes are affecting open-ocean marine ecosystems from phytoplankton to top predators. Biological time series data are thus urgently needed for the world's oceans. Here, we use the carbon stable isotope composition of tuna to provide a first insight into the existence of global trends in complex ecosystem dynamics and changes in the oceanic carbon cycle.

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Article Synopsis
  • There is limited information about the factors affecting methylmercury levels in tuna, which is vital for understanding human health risks from mercury pollution.
  • The study examined mercury concentrations in three tuna species (bigeye, yellowfin, and albacore) in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean, finding higher Hg levels in southern latitudes compared to the equator, with fish size being the most significant contributing factor.
  • The research highlights the need for more regional data on vertical habitats and mercury inputs to better understand and predict mercury distribution in tuna, while also providing context for evaluating the risks associated with tuna consumption in that region.
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Background: Dengue is a mosquito-borne virus that causes extensive morbidity and economic loss in many tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Often present in cities, dengue virus is rapidly spreading due to urbanization, climate change and increased human movements. Dengue cases are often heterogeneously distributed throughout cities, suggesting that small-scale determinants influence dengue urban transmission.

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The relative skill of 21 regional and global biogeochemical models was assessed in terms of how well the models reproduced observed net primary productivity (NPP) and environmental variables such as nitrate concentration (NO), mixed layer depth (MLD), euphotic layer depth (Z), and sea ice concentration, by comparing results against a newly updated, quality-controlled in situ NPP database for the Arctic Ocean (1959-2011). The models broadly captured the spatial features of integrated NPP (iNPP) on a pan-Arctic scale. Most models underestimated iNPP by varying degrees in spite of overestimating surface NO, MLD, and Z throughout the regions.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how various factors influence the distribution of dengue fever in New Caledonia, focusing on interactions between the virus, host, and environmental conditions during epidemic years.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 24,272 dengue cases between 1995 and 2012 using statistical methods to understand how climate and socio-economic factors contribute to the disease's spread.
  • Findings indicate that temperature and socio-economic conditions significantly affect dengue's spatial distribution, predicting that incidence rates could double by 2100 if temperatures rise by 3 °C.
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Coral reefs and lagoons worldwide are vulnerable environments. However, specific geomorphological reef types (fringing, barrier, atoll, bank for the main ones) can be vulnerable to specific disturbances that will not affect most other reefs. This has implications for local management and science priorities.

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Background: Dengue dynamics are driven by complex interactions between human-hosts, mosquito-vectors and viruses that are influenced by environmental and climatic factors. The objectives of this study were to analyze and model the relationships between climate, Aedes aegypti vectors and dengue outbreaks in Noumea (New Caledonia), and to provide an early warning system.

Methodology/principal Findings: Epidemiological and meteorological data were analyzed from 1971 to 2010 in Noumea.

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