10 results match your criteria: "Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation and Integrative Oceanography Division[Affiliation]"
Science
March 2023
School of Biological Sciences, Area of Ecology and Biodiversity, and the Swire Institute of Marine Science, Institute for Climate and Carbon Neutrality, and Musketeers Foundation Institute of Data Science, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
Glob Chang Biol
May 2022
Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
The two most urgent and interlinked environmental challenges humanity faces are climate change and biodiversity loss. We are entering a pivotal decade for both the international biodiversity and climate change agendas with the sharpening of ambitious strategies and targets by the Convention on Biological Diversity and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Within their respective Conventions, the biodiversity and climate interlinked challenges have largely been addressed separately.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
March 2021
Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre (MARE), Laboratório Marítimo da Guia, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Cascais, Portugal.
Over the past decades, three major challenges to marine life have emerged as a consequence of anthropogenic emissions: ocean warming, acidification and oxygen loss. While most experimental research has targeted the first two stressors, the last remains comparatively neglected. Here, we implemented sequential hierarchical mixed-model meta-analyses (721 control-treatment comparisons) to compare the impacts of oxygen conditions associated with the current and continuously intensifying hypoxic events (1-3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
January 2021
School of Biological Sciences and Swire Institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Glob Chang Biol
April 2020
Okeanos Research Centre, Departamento de Oceanografia e Pesca, Universidade dos Açores, Horta, Portugal.
The deep sea plays a critical role in global climate regulation through uptake and storage of heat and carbon dioxide. However, this regulating service causes warming, acidification and deoxygenation of deep waters, leading to decreased food availability at the seafloor. These changes and their projections are likely to affect productivity, biodiversity and distributions of deep-sea fauna, thereby compromising key ecosystem services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
February 2020
School of Biological Sciences and Swire Institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
The deep sea (>200 m depth) encompasses >95% of the world's ocean volume and represents the largest and least explored biome on Earth (<0.0001% of ocean surface), yet is increasingly under threat from multiple direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures. Our ability to preserve both benthic and pelagic deep-sea ecosystems depends upon effective ecosystem-based management strategies and monitoring based on widely agreed deep-sea ecological variables.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
July 2018
Seascape Consultants Ltd., Romsey, UK.
Mineral exploitation has spread from land to shallow coastal waters and is now planned for the offshore, deep seabed. Large seafloor areas are being approved for exploration for seafloor mineral deposits, creating an urgent need for regional environmental management plans. Networks of areas where mining and mining impacts are prohibited are key elements of these plans.
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January 2018
State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200062, China.
Oxygen is fundamental to life. Not only is it essential for the survival of individual animals, but it regulates global cycles of major nutrients and carbon. The oxygen content of the open ocean and coastal waters has been declining for at least the past half-century, largely because of human activities that have increased global temperatures and nutrients discharged to coastal waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
August 2015
Marine Biology Research Group, Ghent University, Krijgslaan 281, B-9000 Gent, Belgium. Electronic address:
Ann Rev Mar Sci
April 2012
Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation and Integrative Oceanography Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California 92093-0218, USA.
Until recently, the deep continental margins (200-4,000 m) were perceived as monotonous mud slopes of limited ecological or environmental concern. Progress in seafloor mapping and direct observation now reveals unexpected heterogeneity, with a mosaic of habitats and ecosystems linked to geomorphological, geochemical, and hydrographic features that influence biotic diversity. Interactions among water masses, terrestrial inputs, sediment diagenesis, and tectonic activity create a multitude of ecological settings supporting distinct communities that populate canyons and seamounts, high-stress oxygen minimum zones, and methane seeps, as well as vast reefs of cold corals and sponges.
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