5 results match your criteria: "Institute of Limnology RAS[Affiliation]"

Geochemical features of humic acids extracted from sediments of urban lakes of the Arctic.

Environ Monit Assess

September 2022

St. Petersburg Federal Research Center of RAS, Institute of Limnology RAS, Sevastyanova 9, St. Petersburg, 196105, Russia.

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines humic acids from urbanized lakes in the Kola Peninsula, focusing on their geochemical and environmental roles.
  • Sediment samples were analyzed for elemental composition and molecular structure, revealing unique characteristics of humic acids in Arctic aquatic ecosystems.
  • Findings suggest that cold climates and pollution slow humification, while the immature, high-oxygen humic acids facilitate metal leaching and stable organometallic compound formation despite low chelate groups.
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Shallow thaw (thermokarst) lakes abundant in regions of permafrost-affected peatlands represent important sources of carbon dioxide and methane emission to the atmosphere, however the quantitative parameters of phytoplankton communities which control the C cycle in these lakes remain poorly known. This is especially true considering the roles of permafrost, hydrochemical composition of lakes, lake sizes and season as major governing factors on phytoplankton abundance and biodiversity. In this work, we quantified phytoplankton characteristics of 27 thermokarst lakes (sizes ranging from 115 m2 to 1.

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Relative importance of climate and spatial processes in shaping species composition, functional structure and beta diversity of phytoplankton in a large river.

Sci Total Environ

February 2022

University of Public Service, Faculty of Water Sciences, Bajcsy-Zsilinszky utca 12-14, H-6500 Baja, Hungary; Centre for Ecological Research, Institute of Aquatic Ecology, Karolina út 29, H-1113 Budapest, Hungary. Electronic address:

Although metacommunity dynamics of lentic phytoplankton are relatively well-documented, studies on the role of environmental and spatial processes in shaping phytoplankton communities of large rivers are still scarce. Here, we examined six phytoplankton data sets, which were collected in 1978-2017 from large river-scale segments (mean spatial extent 1117 km) in the Danube River. Our aim was to elucidate role of climatic, spatial and temporal predictors in variation of phytoplankton beta diversity using variance partitioning for compositions of species and functional groups sensu Reynolds.

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This paper presents the comprehensive evaluation of the level of accumulation of some of the most dangerous environmental pollutants (V, Co, Sn, Ni, Cr, Mn, Cd, Cu, Pb, Sb, Zn) and analyses their chemical forms in sediments of four small lakes located within Murmansk urban territory. Furthermore, the authors first studied morphology and chemical composition of industrial dust collected from the snow covering the ice of Lake Srednee. Fieldwork was carried out in April 2019.

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The main objectives of this work were the acquisition of new data on floating marine macro litter (FMML) and natural floating objects in the Arctic seas, an initial assessment of the level of pollution by FMML and an analysis of potential sources. The results of this study present the first data on FMML distribution in Russian Arctic shelf seas in relation to oceanographic conditions (i.e.

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