The polar cod (Boreogadus saida) has a circumpolar distribution and is the most abundant planktivorous fish in the Arctic. Declining sea-ice coverage impacts polar cod directly and also facilitates expansion of human activities in the region leading to increasing anthropogenic pressures on biota. Here we summarize current data and knowledge on polar cod from the Russian sector of the Barents Sea and discuss knowledge needs for the management of polar cod under changing environmental conditions and anthropogenic impacts. We review 36 Russian historical (1935 - 2020) sources of data and knowledge largely unknown to western researchers, in addition to sources already published in the English language. This effort allowed for digitalization and visualization of 69 separate datasets on polar cod ecology, including maturation, fertility, feeding intensity, diet, lipid content, length-weight relationships and seasonal variation in larval size. Our review suggests that polar cod abundances are particularly large in the eastern Barents Sea and adjacent waters. Here, we identify and discuss key knowledge gaps. The review of polar cod in the eastern Barents Sea revealed 1) major variation in the timing and area of polar cod spawning, 2) uncertainty as to what degree the polar cod is dependent on sea ice, 3) deficient knowledge of juvenile (e.g., 0-group) distributions, particularly in the north-eastern Barents Sea, 4) deficient knowledge of the species' genetic structure and spatio-temporal distributions, and 5) insufficient understanding as to whether ongoing environmental change may induce phenological changes affecting the availability of potential food items for polar cod larvae and their match in space and time. Filling these knowledge gaps would provide an important step towards the reliable knowledge base needed in order to perform well-founded management and impact assessment under environmental changes and increasing anthropogenic impacts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105262 | DOI Listing |
Chem Sci
December 2024
Department of Chemistry, University of York Heslington YO10 5DD UK
This work details how the unusual iridium tetrahydride [Ir(H)(IMes)(sulfoxide)]Na and trihydride [Ir(H)(IMes)(sulfoxide)] can be formed in a solvent dependent reaction of [IrCl(COD)(IMes)] with sulfoxide (dimethyl or methylphenyl), base, and H. In the case of dimethyl sulfoxide, the four hydride ligands of the tetrahydride are equivalent, and the IMes and sulfoxide ligands mutually . However, for phenyl methyl sulfoxide, this isomer of the tetrahydride forms alongside its counterpart where the remarkable symmetry breaking effect of the sulfoxide leads to it presenting four chemically distinct hydride ligands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Microbiol
June 2024
Department of Environmental Engineering, Tikrit University, Tikrit, Iraq.
Unlabelled: The demand for energy resources is constantly increasing. That means need more fossil fuels to provide them. People consume a lot of food and this produces many wastes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2024
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universitá degli Studi di Trieste, Trieste 34127, Italy.
The distinctive characteristics of water, evident in its thermodynamic anomalies, have implications across disciplines from biology to geophysics. Considered a valid hypothesis to rationalize its unique properties, a liquid-liquid phase transition in water below the freezing point, in the so-called supercooled regime, has nowadays been observed in several molecular dynamics simulations and is being actively researched experimentally. The hypothesis of ferroelectric phase transition in supercooled water can be traced back to 1977, due to Stillinger.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Commun (Camb)
November 2024
NMRCoRe, NMR/X-Ray Platform for Convergence Research, KU Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200F, box 2461, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium.
Repeatable hyperpolarization of high concentrations of mobile protons (>6 M) using parahydrogen in protic methanol/water mixtures is reported here. Different ammonium buffers with increasing mobile proton concentrations were added to an IrCl(COD)(IMes) catalyst in the presence of pyridine. We reach a maximum molar polarization of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
October 2024
Department of Biosciences, Section for Aquatic Biology and Toxicology (AQUA), University of Oslo, PO Box 1066, Blindern, Oslo NO-0316, Norway.
Population dynamics depend on trophic interactions that are affected by climate change. The rise in sea temperature is associated with the disappearance of sea ice in the Arctic. In the Arctic part of the Barents Sea, Atlantic cod, capelin and polar cod are three fish populations that interact and are confronted with climate-induced sea ice reductions.
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