59 results match your criteria: "Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT)[Affiliation]"
Conserv Biol
December 2023
Global Marine Program, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York, USA.
Understanding the relative effectiveness and enabling conditions of different area-based management tools is essential for supporting efforts that achieve positive biodiversity outcomes as area-based conservation coverage increases to meet newly set international targets. We used data from a coastal social-ecological monitoring program in 6 Indo-Pacific countries to analyze whether social, ecological, and economic objectives and specific management rules (temporal closures, fishing gear-specific, species-specific restrictions) were associated with coral reef fish biomass above sustainable yield levels across different types of area-based management tools (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
July 2023
Departamento de Química, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Rua Marquês de São Vicente, 225, Gávea, Rio de Janeiro 22453-900, Brazil.
Mar Pollut Bull
April 2020
Grupo de Estudos de Mamíferos Marinhos da Região dos Lagos (GEMM-Lagos), Rua São José 1.260, Praia Seca, Araruama, RJ 28970-000, Brazil; Laboratório de Avaliação e Promoção da Saúde Ambiental, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Av. Brasil, 4.365, Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro, 21040-360, Brazil. Electronic address:
Titanium (Ti), used in many dailyuse products, such as shampoos and sunscreen filters, in the form of TiO nanoparticles (NPs), may elicit adverse marine biota effects. Marine mammal Ti data is scarce, and subcellular distribution and detoxification information is non-existent. Ti concentrations and metalloprotein detoxification in Pontoporia blainvillei and Steno bredanensis dolphins from Southeastern Brazil were assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
September 2019
Laboratório de Avaliação e Promoção da Saúde Ambiental, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Av. Brasil, 4.365, Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro 21040-360, Brazil. Electronic address:
J Fish Biol
March 2019
Institut Universitaire des Pêches et d'Aauculture (IUPA), Université Cheikh Anta Diop (UCAD), UCAD II, Dakar, Sénégal.
We examined growth rates and reproductive characteristics of Sardinella aurita off Senegal and other coastal areas over a 20 year period (1995-2014) to determine how they relate to variations in environmental characteristics of coastal waters. Based on fish length-frequency data and a coastal upwelling index, we found that S. aurita recruitment tends to occur during the periods of most intensive upwelling (March-April off Senegal).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
January 2018
Red Sea Research Center, Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering Division (BESE), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, Saudi Arabia.
Coastal pollution and algal cover are increasing on many coral reefs, resulting in higher dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations. High DOC concentrations strongly affect microbial activity in reef waters and select for copiotrophic, often potentially virulent microbial populations. High DOC concentrations on coral reefs are also hypothesized to be a determinant for switching microbial lifestyles from commensal to pathogenic, thereby contributing to coral reef degradation, but evidence is missing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Appl Microbiol
July 2017
Microbial Ecology of Aquatic Transitional Systems Research Group, Centro Universitario Región Este, Universidad de la República, Ruta nacional N°9, 2700 Rocha, Uruguay.
Chitin is the second most abundant polymer on Earth, playing a crucial role in the biogeochemical cycles. A core issue for studying its processing in aquatic systems is the identification and enumeration of chitin-containing particles and organisms, ideally in a manner that can be directly linked to bulk chitin quantification. The aim of this study was the development of such a technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
May 2017
The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences of Eilat, PO Box 469, Eilat 88103, Israel.
Coral reefs are amongst the most diverse ecosystems on Earth where complex inter-specific interactions are ubiquitous. An example of such interactions is the mutualistic relationship between damselfishes and branching corals in the Northern Red Sea, where the fish use corals as shelter and provide them with nutrients, enhance the flow between their branches, and protect them from predators. By enhancing the flow between the coral branches, the fish ventilate the coral's inner zone, mitigating hypoxic conditions that otherwise develop within that zone during the night.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
March 2017
Department of Statistics, TU Dortmund University, Dortmund, Germany.
Background: The classification of samples on a molecular level has manifold applications, from patient classification regarding cancer treatment to phylogenetics for identifying evolutionary relationships between species. Modern methods employ the alignment of DNA or amino acid sequences, mostly not genome-wide but only on selected parts of the genome. Recently proteomics-based approaches have become popular.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2017
Institute of Marine Science, Dar-es-Salaam University, Zanzibar, Tanzania.
Natural resource users face a trade-off between present and future consumption. Using harmful methods or extracting unsustainably, lowers future consumption. Therefore, it is reasonable to posit that people with higher time preferences extract more as compared to people with lower time preferences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2016
Systems Ecology, Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Bremen, Germany.
Biodiversity is known to be an important determinant of ecosystem-level functions and processes. Although theories have been proposed to explain the generally positive relationship between, for example, biodiversity and productivity, it remains unclear which mechanisms underlie the observed variations in Biodiversity-Ecosystem Function (BEF) relationships. Using a continuous trait-distribution model for a phytoplankton community of gleaners competing with opportunists, and subjecting it to differing frequencies of disturbance, we find that species selection tends to enhance temporal species complementarity, which is maximised at high disturbance frequency and intermediate functional diversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
November 2016
Departamento de Química, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro, RJ 22453-900, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Electronic address:
Dolphins are good bioindicators of the contamination status of marine ecosystems, since their dietary and habitat plasticity in both coastal and offshore ecotypes provide information on the trace elements levels originated from natural and anthropogenic sources. In this context, this study aimed to investigate provides mercury (Hg), selenium (Se) levels, trophic ecology and feeding environments of four small cetaceans (Tursiops truncatus, Steno bredanensis, Sotalia guianensis and Pontoporia blainvillei) inhabiting the central-northern coast of Rio de Janeiro State, southeastern Brazil. For the latter, δN and δC stable isotopes were used as indicators in this regard.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
September 2016
Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Sciences, Bogor Agricultural University (IPB), Indonesia.
PLoS One
August 2017
Laboratory of Photobiology, Unidad Académica de Sistemas Arrecifales Puerto Morelos (ICMyL), Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Cancún, Mexico.
J Comp Physiol B
January 2017
MARE-Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, ESTM, Instituto Politécnico de Leiria, Peniche, Portugal.
Holothuria scabra is the most valued and cultured tropical sea cucumber, given the great demand of this species for human consumption. However, despite its ecological and economic relevance, little is known regarding its immune responses under thermal stress. Here, the main goal was to study the response of sea cucumbers to temperature stress, assessing sub-organismal alterations and acclimation capacities of juveniles to temperature changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol
September 2016
Coral Reef Ecology Group (CORE), Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Fahrenheitstr. 6, DE, 28359, Bremen, Germany.
Coral holobionts (i.e., coral-algal-prokaryote symbioses) exhibit dissimilar thermal sensitivities that may determine which coral species will adapt to global warming.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
May 2016
Coral Reef Ecology Group, Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), 28359 Bremen, Germany. Electronic address:
Carbon and nitrogen stable isotopic signatures of suspended particulate organic matter and seawater biological oxygen demand (BOD) were measured along a coastal transect during summer 2015 to investigate pollution impacts of a high-discharge submarine sewage outfall close to Salvador, Brazil. Impacts of untreated sewage discharge were evident at the outfall site by depleted δ(13)Corg and δ(15)N signatures and 4-fold increased BOD rates. Pollution effects of a sewage plume were detectable for more than 6km downstream from the outfall site, as seasonal wind- and tide-driven shelf hydrodynamics facilitated its advective transport into near-shore waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
September 2016
Center for Fisheries Research and Development (Puslitbangkan), Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries, Jl. Pasir Putih II, Ancol Timur, Jakarta 14430, Indonesia.
Mar Pollut Bull
September 2016
Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT) Bremen GmbH, Fahrenheitstraße 6, 28359 Bremen, Germany.
Jakarta Bay in Indonesia and its offshore island chain, the Thousand Islands, are facing extreme pollution. Surfactants and diesel-borne compounds from sewage and bilge water discharges are common pollutants. However, knowledge of their effects on reef fish physiology is scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2016
Department of Ecology, Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Bremen, Germany.
Coral reefs are facing major global and local threats due to climate change-induced increases in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and because of land-derived increases in organic and inorganic nutrients. Recent research revealed that high availability of labile dissolved organic carbon (DOC) negatively affects scleractinian corals. Studies on the interplay of these factors, however, are lacking, but urgently needed to understand coral reef functioning under present and near future conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
September 2016
Institute of Geology and Geochemistry of Petroleum and Coal (GGPC), RWTH Aachen University, Lochnerstraße 4-20, 52056 Aachen, Germany. Electronic address:
Non-target screening analyses were conducted in order to identify a wide range of organic contaminants in sediment and animal tissue samples from Jakarta Bay. High concentrations of di-iso-propylnaphthalenes (DIPNs), linear alkylbenzenes (LABs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were detected in all samples, whereas phenylmethoxynaphthalene (PMN), DDT and DDT metabolites (DDX) were detected at lower concentrations. In order to evaluate the uptake and accumulation by economic important mussel (Perna viridis) and fish species, contaminant patterns of DIPNs, LABs and PAHs in different compartments were compared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2016
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ-Yerseke), PO Box 140, 4400 AC Yerseke, the Netherlands.
Shallow warm-water and deep-sea cold-water corals engineer the coral reef framework and fertilize reef communities by releasing coral mucus, a source of reef dissolved organic matter (DOM). By transforming DOM into particulate detritus, sponges play a key role in transferring the energy and nutrients in DOM to higher trophic levels on Caribbean reefs via the so-called sponge loop. Coral mucus may be a major DOM source for the sponge loop, but mucus uptake by sponges has not been demonstrated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe genus Kogia, which comprises only two extant species, Kogia sima and Kogia breviceps, represents one of the least known groups of cetaceans in the global ocean. In some coastal regions, however, stranding events of these species have been relatively common over the last decades. Stranding provides the opportunity to investigate the biology of these cetaceans and to explore the epidemiological aspects associated with the mortality of the organisms found on the beach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
March 2016
Soil Physics and Land Management Group, University of Wageningen, Droevendaalsesteeg 4, 6708PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
Despite the increasing impact of heavy metal pollution in southern Mexico due to urban growth and agricultural and petroleum activities, few studies have focused on the behavior and relationships of these pollutants in the biotic and abiotic components of aquatic environments. Here, we studied the bioaccumulation of heavy metals (Cd, Cr, Ni, Pb, V, Zn) in suspended load, sediment, primary producers, mollusks, crustaceans, and fish, in a deltaic lagoon habitat in the Tabasco coast, with the aim to assess the potential ecological risk in that important wetland. Zn showed the highest concentrations, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
December 2015
Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Fahrenheitstrasse 6, 28359 Bremen, Germany.
River outgassing has proven to be an integral part of the carbon cycle. In Southeast Asia, river outgassing quantities are uncertain due to lack of measured data. Here we investigate six rivers in Indonesia and Malaysia, during five expeditions.
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