318 results match your criteria: "National Marine Science Centre[Affiliation]"

Discovering new antibiotics and increasing the efficacy of existing antibiotics are priorities to address antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial proteins and peptides (AMPPs) are considered among the most promising antibiotic alternatives and complementary therapies. Here, we build upon previous work investigating the antibacterial activity of a semi-purified hemolymph protein extract (HPE) of the Australian oyster Saccostrea glomerata.

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Revered and Reviled: The Plight of the Vanishing Sea Cucumbers.

Ann Rev Mar Sci

January 2025

Sea Cucumber Specialist Group, Species Survival Commission, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Gland, Switzerland.

Sea cucumbers paradoxically suffer from being both highly prized and commonly disregarded. As an Asian medicine and delicacy, they command fabulous prices and are thus overfished, poached, and trafficked. As noncharismatic animals, many are understudied and inadequately protected.

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Coastal ecosystems play a major role in marine carbon budgets, but substantial uncertainties remain in the sources and fluxes of coastal carbon dioxide (CO). Here, we assess when, where, and how submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) releases CO to shallow coastal ecosystems. Time-series observations of dissolved CO and radon (Rn, a natural groundwater tracer) across 40 coastal systems from 14 countries revealed large SGD-derived CO fluxes.

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Hydrofluoroolefins (HFOs) and hydrochlorofluoroolefins (HCFOs) are the leading synthetic replacements for compounds successively banned by the Montreal Protocol and amendments. HFOs and HCFOs readily decompose in the atmosphere to form fluorinated carbonyls, including CFCHO in yields of up to 100%, which are then photolyzed. A long-standing issue, critical for the transition to safe industrial gases, is whether atmospheric decomposition of CFCHO yields any quantity of CHF (HFC-23), which is one of the most environmentally hazardous greenhouse gases.

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Soft plastic fishing lures and fishing nets significantly influence the decomposition of Ecklonia radiata.

Mar Pollut Bull

December 2024

National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, PO Box 4321, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.

Discarded or lost fishing gear from recreational or commercial fishers significantly contributes to global marine pollution. This debris accumulates with organic detritus on the seafloor, potentially impacting detrital dynamics. We used an outdoor mesocosm experiment to test hypotheses that soft plastic lures with nylon lines and commercial-grade fish netting influence the decomposition of Ecklonia radiata detritus in current and future ocean temperatures.

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Globally, anthropogenic climate change has caused declines of seagrass ecosystems necessitating proactive restoration approaches that would ideally anticipate future climate scenarios, such as marine warming. In eastern Australia, estuaries with meadows of the endangered seagrass s have warmed and acidified over the past decade, and seagrass communities have declined in some estuaries. Securing these valuable habitats will require proactive conservation and restoration efforts that could be augmented with restoration focussed on boosting resilience to future climate.

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Article Synopsis
  • Contaminants, particularly from rainfall, pose risks to the health of decapods (e.g., shrimp, crabs) that are crucial for fisheries, highlighting concerns for sustainability in these environments.
  • A systematic review analyzed 138 studies, revealing that exposure to metals, PAHs, and pesticides negatively affects decapod physiology, especially in key processes like growth and metabolism.
  • The findings stress the urgent need for regulatory testing of new chemicals to protect harvested species, especially as climate changes could increase contaminant exposure in estuaries.
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Decomposition of Sargassum detritus varies with exposure to different plastic types.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

December 2024

National Marine Science Centre and Marine Ecology Research Centre, Southern Cross University, PO Box 4321, Coffs Harbour, NSW, 2450, Australia.

Plastic pollution and ocean warming threaten crucial ecosystem processes, including detrital decomposition. We carried out a manipulative experiment using 20 outdoor raceways to test hypotheses about the influence of macroplastics (polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), and biodegradable (BIO)) and ocean warming (as 3 °C above ambient sea surface temperatures) on the decomposition of Sargassum vestitum. All types of plastic significantly decreased rates of S.

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Mangrove forests enhance Small Island Developing States' resilience to climate change, yet in 2020, a mangrove dieback impacted ~ 25% of mangrove-containing islands in the Maldives. Using remote sensing, dendrology and sediment geochemistry, we document a significant decrease in mangrove health post-2020 (NDVI: 0.75 ± 0.

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A global assessment of mangrove soil organic carbon sources and implications for blue carbon credit.

Nat Commun

October 2024

Xiaoliang Research Station of Tropical Coastal Ecosystems, Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Management of Degraded Ecosystems, the CAS Engineering Laboratory for Ecological Restoration of Island and Coastal Ecosystems, and Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Botany, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, P.R. China.

Mangroves can retain both autochthonous and allochthonous marine and/or terrestrial organic carbon (OC) in sediments. Accurate quantification of these OC sources is essential for the proper allocation of blue C credits. Here, we conduct a global-scale analysis of sediments autochthonous and allochthonous OC contributions in estuarine and marine mangroves using stable isotopes.

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The frequencies of marine heatwaves and thermal coral bleaching events (CBEs) over the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) continue to increase with five mass CBEs reported since 2016. While changes in the local meteorology, such as reduced wind speeds and decreased cloud cover, are known to heat the shallow reef waters, little consideration has been given to the overriding synoptic meteorology. The 2022 CBE, occurring under La Niña conditions, saw ocean temperatures at Davies Reef increase 1.

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Soil greenhouse gas fluxes partially reduce the net gains in carbon sequestration in mangroves of the Brazilian Amazon.

Environ Res

December 2024

Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz Queiroz, Universidade de São Paulo (ESALQ/USP), Departamento de Ciência do Solo, Piracicaba, SP, Brazil; Center for Carbon Research in Tropical Agriculture (CCARBON) - University of São Paulo, Piracicaba, São Paulo, 13416-900, Brazil.

There is interest in assessing the potential climate mitigation benefit of coastal wetlands based on the balance between their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and carbon sequestration. Here we investigated soil GHG fluxes (CO and CH) on mangroves of the Brazilian Amazon coast, and across common land use impacts including shrimp farms and a pasture. We found greater methane fluxes near the Amazon River mouth (1439 to 3312 μg C m h), which on average are equivalent to 37% of mangrove C sequestration in the region.

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Adaptation of reef-building corals to global warming depends upon standing heritable variation in tolerance traits upon which selection can act. Yet limited knowledge exists on heat-tolerance variation among conspecific individuals separated by metres to hundreds of kilometres. Here, we performed standardized acute heat-stress assays to quantify the thermal tolerance traits of 709 colonies of from 13 reefs spanning 1060 km (9.

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Understanding how macroalgal forests will respond to environmental change is critical for predicting future impacts on coastal ecosystems. Although measures of adult macroalgae physiological responses to environmental stress are advancing, measures of early life-stage physiology are rare, in part due to the methodological difficulties associated with their small size. Here we tested a novel, high-throughput method (rate of oxygen consumption and production; ) via a sensor dish reader microplate system to rapidly measure physiological rates of the early life stages of three habitat-forming macroalgae, the kelp Ecklonia radiata and the fucoids Hormosira banksii and Phyllospora comosa.

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Pesticides, including insecticides and fungicides, are major contaminants in the effluent from intensive agricultural systems, such as greenhouses. Because of their constant use and persistence, some pesticides can accumulate in soil and/or run off into adjacent waterways. Microbial communities in soil can degrade some pesticides, and bioreactors with enhanced microbial communities have the potential to facilitate decontamination before the effluent is released into the environment.

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Crown-of-thorns starfish complete their larval phase eating only nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria.

Sci Adv

July 2024

National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour 2450, Australia.

Article Synopsis
  • Cyanobacteria of the genus contribute new nitrogen to nutrient-poor marine ecosystems, but their role as a food source is not well understood.
  • In a lab study, researchers found that the predatory crown-of-thorns starfish (CoTS) larvae feed exclusively on this cyanobacteria during their larval phase.
  • The presence of cyanobacteria in CoTS larvae suggests that increased blooms may contribute to rising populations of CoTS, which have been harmful to coral reefs in recent decades.
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Microwave Spectroscopy of Chiral Astrochemical Candidate Vinyloxirane: The Missing Gauche Conformer.

J Phys Chem A

July 2024

Department of Biochemistry & Chemistry, La Trobe Institute of Molecular Sciences, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria 3086, Australia.

The recent detection of a chiral molecule, propylene oxide, in the interstellar medium provides impetus for investigation of related analogues as candidates for discovery of a second chiral species. Vinyloxirane (VO) shares many of the characteristics of propylene oxide that favored its remote detection such as modest size, appreciable dipole moment and modest adsorption to water ice. The microwave spectrum of vinyloxirane at room temperature has been studied in the 18 - 26 GHz region.

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Urbanization of estuaries drastically changed existing shorelines and bathymetric contours, in turn modifying habitat for marine foundational species that host critical biodiversity. And yet we lack approaches to characterize a significant fraction of the biota that inhabit these ecosystems on time scales that align with rates of urbanization. Environmental DNA (or eDNA) metabarcoding that combines multiple assays targeting a broad range of taxonomic groups can provide a solution, but we need to determine whether the biological communities it detects ally with different habitats in these changing aquatic environments.

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Ocean warming will continue to affect the growth, body condition and geographic distributions of marine fishes and understanding these effects is an urgent challenge for fisheries research and management. Determining how temperature is recorded in fish otolith carbonate, provides an additional chronological tool to investigate thermal histories, preferences and patterns of movement throughout an individual's life history. The influence of three water temperature treatments (22°C, 25°C, and 28°C) on hatchery-reared juvenile stout whiting, Sillago robusta, was tested using a controlled outdoor mesocosm system.

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Spartina alterniflora invasion benefits blue carbon sequestration in China.

Sci Bull (Beijing)

June 2024

Guangdong Key Laboratory of Applied Botany, Xiaoliang Research Station of Tropical Coastal Ecosystems, the CAS Engineering Laboratory for Ecological Restoration of Island and Coastal Ecosystems, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, China; South China National Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, China; Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), Zhuhai 519082, China; School of Ecology and Environment, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China. Electronic address:

Spartina alterniflora has rapidly and extensively encroached on China's coastline over the past decades. Among the coastal areas invaded by S. alterniflora, at most 93% are mudflats.

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The southern coast of Africa is one of the few places in the world where water temperatures are predicted to cool in the future. This endemism-rich coastline is home to two sister species of kelps of the genus Ecklonia maxima and Ecklonia radiata, each associated with specific thermal niches, and occuring primarily on opposite sides of the southern tip of Africa. Historical distribution records indicate that E.

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Can denticle morphology help identify southeastern Australian elasmobranchs?

J Fish Biol

June 2024

School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Ourimbah, New South Wales, Australia.

Elasmobranchs are covered in scale-like structures called dermal denticles, comprising dentine and enameloid. These structures vary across the body of an individual and between species, and are frequently shed and preserved in marine sediments. With a good understanding of denticle morphology, current and historical elasmobranch diversity and abundance might be assessed from sediment samples.

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The Legal Amazon of Brazil holds vast mangrove forests, but a lack of awareness of their value has prevented their inclusion into results-based payments established by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Based on an inventory from over 190 forest plots in Amazon mangroves, we estimate total ecosystem carbon stocks of 468 ± 67 Megagrams (Mg) ha; which are significantly higher than Brazilian upland biomes currently included into national carbon offset financing. Conversion of mangroves results in potential emissions of 1228 Mg COe ha, which are 3-fold higher than land use emissions from conversion of the Amazon rainforest.

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