Publications by authors named "Johannes Rick"

Background: Within the scope of the Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration (HMC), the ADVANCE project - Advanced metadata standards for biodiversity survey and monitoring data: supporting of research and conservation - aimed at supporting rich metadata generation with interoperable metadata standards and semantic artefacts that facilitate data access, integration and reuse across terrestrial, freshwater and marine realms. HMC's mission is to facilitate the discovery, access, machine-readability, and reuse of research data across and beyond the Helmholtz Association.

New Information: We revised, adapted and expanded existing metadata schemas, vocabularies and thesauri to build a FAIR metadata schema and a metadata entry form built on it for users to provide their metadata instances focused on biodiversity monitoring data.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Marine microalgae, or phytoplankton, are crucial in global carbon cycling as they fix nearly half of the world's carbon dioxide through photosynthesis, especially during significant blooms where their biomass is composed mainly of polysaccharides.
  • - A study analyzed polysaccharide-degrading bacteria during a phytoplankton bloom, revealing distinct groups of bacteria based on size: smaller free-living bacteria and larger particle-attached ones, with the latter showing greater diversity and adaptive changes over time.
  • - The research produced 305 species-level genomes, including 152 from particle-attached bacteria, many of which were novel to the area; these genomes indicated a greater capacity for utilizing a wider range of polysaccharides, showcasing their
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The richness of plankton communities determines the fish productivity in the ocean, including important resources that rely on extractive fisheries, such as hakes (genus Merluccius) and tunas (genus Thunnus). Their preys forage on zooplankton, and the latter feed on phytoplankton. Inventories of plankton communities for scientific advice to sustainable fishing are essential in this moment of climate change.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marine microalgae blooms are crucial for global carbon cycling, significantly affecting how carbon is processed in the ocean.
  • A study conducted in the German Bight analyzed 90 days of planktonic bacterial samples, revealing key bacterial metabolisms involved in breaking down algal polysaccharides, notably β-glucans and α-glucans.
  • The findings suggest that both the presence and the breakdown of these polysaccharides shape the community structure of bacterioplankton during blooms, influenced by both algal and bacterial processes.
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In marine settings, anthropogenic disturbances and climate change increase the rate of biological invasions. Predicting still undescribed invasive alien species (IAS) is needed for preparing timely management responses. We tested a strategy for discovering new potential IAS using DNA in a trans-equatorial expedition onboard RV Polarstern.

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Invasion trajectories of introduced alien species usually begin with a long establishment phase of low abundance, often followed by exponential expansion and subsequent adjustment phases. We review the first 26 years of feral Pacific oysters around the island of Sylt in the Wadden Sea (North Sea, NE Atlantic), and reveal causal conditions for the invasion phases. Sea-based oyster farming with repeated introductions made establishment of feral oysters almost inevitable.

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A simple model of phytoplankton-zooplankton interaction with a periodic input nutrient is presented. The model is then used to study a nutrient-plankton interaction with a toxic substance that inhibits the growth rate of plankton populations. The effects of the toxin upon the existence, magnitude, and stability of the periodic solutions are discussed.

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