318 results match your criteria: "National Marine Science Centre[Affiliation]"
Mar Biotechnol (NY)
October 2024
National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, 2 Bay Drive, Coffs Harbour, NSW, 2450, Australia.
Pneumococcal infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, particularly among children. The ability of S. pneumoniae to form enduring biofilms makes treatment inherently difficult, and options are further limited by emerging antibiotic resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
April 2024
Program of Geochemistry, Federal Fluminense University, Niterói, RJ, Brazil.
Phosphorus (P) behavior was evaluated in mangrove wetlands impacted by urban sewage, including a deforested site. Sediment cores were analyzed for grain size, organic carbon, total nitrogen, stable isotopes (δC and δN), P contents, and pore water PO concentrations and net consumption/production rates. Under stronger eutrophication influence, significantly higher P (1390 vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
April 2024
State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, Institute of Eco-Chongming, Center for Blue Carbon Science and Technology, East China Normal University, 3663 N. Zhongshan Road, Shanghai 200062, PR China; Yangtze Delta Estuarine Wetland Ecosystem Observation and Research Station, Ministry of Education & Shanghai Science and Technology Committee, Shanghai 202162, PR China. Electronic address:
Climate change provides an opportunity for the northward expansion of mangroves, and thus, the afforestation of mangroves at higher latitude areas presents an achievable way for coastal restoration, especially where invasive species S. alterniflora needs to be clipped. However, it is unclear whether replacing S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
March 2024
Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Mosman, New South Wales, Australia.
Mar Pollut Bull
February 2024
Hainan Dongzhaigang Mangrove Wetland Ecosystem Observation Station, Research Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Guangzhou 510520, PR China. Electronic address:
Mangroves sequester and store large area-specific quantities of blue carbon (C) and essential nutrients such as nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P). Quantifying C and nutrient burial rates in mangroves across a centennial time span and relating these rates to mangrove habitat is fundamental for elucidating the role of mangroves in carbon and nutrient budgets and their responses to environmental changes. However, relevant data are very limited in China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
February 2024
Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Australia; National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, Australia.
Monitoring pesticide run-off in the aquatic environment is ecologically important. Effective methods are required to detect the wide range of possible pesticides that enter estuaries from the surrounding catchment. Here, we investigate the occurrence of pesticides in the Richmond River estuary, Australia, and compare the effectiveness of using oysters and Chemcatcher® passive sampling devices against composite water samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
January 2024
New South Wales Department of Primary Industries Fisheries, Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Mosman, New South Wales 2088, Australia.
Shark-human interactions are some of the most pervasive human-wildlife conflicts, and their frequencies are increasing globally. New South Wales (Australia) was the first to implement a broad-scale program of shark-bite mitigation in 1937 using shark nets, which expanded in the late 2010s to include non-lethal measures. Using 196 unprovoked shark-human interactions recorded in New South Wales since 1900, we show that bites shifted from being predominantly on swimmers to 79 % on surfers by the 1980s and increased 2-4-fold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
December 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia.
Genomic vulnerability analyses are being increasingly used to assess the adaptability of species to climate change and provide an opportunity for proactive management of harvested marine species in changing oceans. Southeastern Australia is a climate change hotspot where many marine species are shifting poleward. The turban snail, is a commercially and culturally harvested marine gastropod snail from eastern Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
December 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour 2450, Australia.
Marine cloud brightening (MCB) is a potential intervention to mitigate the effects of climate change by increasing the reflectance of low-level maritime clouds, including those over the Great Barrier Reef. The technique involves dispersing a plume of submicrometer seawater droplets over the ocean, which evaporate, generating nanosized sea-salt aerosols (SSAs) that disperse through the atmosphere with some fraction incorporated into clouds. Droplet evaporation, which occurs in the immediate vicinity (meters to tens of meters) of the source, has been theorized to produce a negatively buoyant plume hindering the mixing of the sea-salt aerosol to cloud height and compromising the effectiveness of MCB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phycol
February 2024
NSW Department of Primary Industries, National Marine Science Centre, Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia.
The Anthropocene is defined as the current period in which humans have had a large influence over the status and trajectory of earth's climate and environment. Human-induced climate change, pollution, and coastal development have caused major changes to algal persistence, distribution, diversity, and function. This has not only brought new challenges for managing and conserving algae, but also new opportunities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
November 2023
New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.
Monitoring marine fauna is essential for mitigating the effects of disturbances in the marine environment, as well as reducing the risk of negative interactions between humans and marine life. Drone-based aerial surveys have become popular for detecting and estimating the abundance of large marine fauna. However, sightability errors, which affect detection reliability, are still apparent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
November 2023
Conservation Science Group, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Tidal marshes store large amounts of organic carbon in their soils. Field data quantifying soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks provide an important resource for researchers, natural resource managers, and policy-makers working towards the protection, restoration, and valuation of these ecosystems. We collated a global dataset of tidal marsh soil organic carbon (MarSOC) from 99 studies that includes location, soil depth, site name, dry bulk density, SOC, and/or soil organic matter (SOM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
October 2023
NSW Department of Primary Industries, Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Mosman, NSW 2088, Australia.
Human-shark conflict has been managed through catch-and-kill policies in most parts of the world. More recently, there has been a greater demand for shark bite mitigation measures to improve protection for water users whilst minimizing harm to non-target and target species, particularly White Sharks (), given their status as a Threatened, Endangered, or Protected (TEP) species. A new non-lethal shark bite mitigation method, known as the Shark-Management-Alert-in-Real-Time (SMART) drumline, alerts responders when an animal takes the bait and thereby provides an opportunity for rapid response to the catch and potentially to relocate, tag, and release sharks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
October 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour 2450, Australia.
Rivers are often assumed to be the main source of nutrients triggering eutrophication in the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). However, existing nutrient budgets suggest a major missing source of nitrogen and phosphorus sustaining primary production. Here, we used radium isotopes to resolve submarine groundwater discharge (SGD)-derived, shelf-scale nutrient inputs to the GBR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
August 2023
NSW Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries Research, National Marine Science Centre, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia.
Unprovoked shark bites have increased over the last three decades, yet they are still relatively rare. Bull sharks are globally distributed throughout rivers, estuaries, nearshore areas and continental shelf waters, and are capable of making long distance movements between tropical and temperate regions. As this species is implicated in shark bites throughout their range, knowledge of the environmental drivers of bull shark movements are important for better predicting the likelihood of their occurrence at ocean beaches and potentially assist in reducing shark bites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Rev Mar Sci
January 2024
Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
Marine foundation species are the biotic basis for many of the world's coastal ecosystems, providing structural habitat, food, and protection for myriad plants and animals as well as many ecosystem services. However, climate change poses a significant threat to foundation species and the ecosystems they support. We review the impacts of climate change on common marine foundation species, including corals, kelps, seagrasses, salt marsh plants, mangroves, and bivalves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Bot
March 2024
National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, NSW, Australia.
Background And Aims: Kelp forests underpin temperate marine ecosystems but are declining due to ocean warming, causing loss of associated ecosystem services. Projections suggest significant future decline but often only consider the persistence of adult sporophytes. Kelps have a biphasic life cycle, and the haploid gametophyte can be more thermally tolerant than the sporophyte.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInnovation (Camb)
September 2023
Xiaoliang Research Station of Tropical Coastal Ecosystems, Key Laboratory of Vegetation Restoration and Management of Degraded Ecosystems, and the CAS Engineering Laboratory for Ecological Restoration of Island and Coastal Ecosystems, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, China.
To achieve the Paris Agreement, China pledged to become "Carbon Neutral" by the 2060s. In addition to massive decarbonization, this would require significant changes in ecosystems toward negative CO emissions. The ability of coastal blue carbon ecosystems (BCEs), including mangrove, salt marsh, and seagrass meadows, to sequester large amounts of CO makes their conservation and restoration an important "nature-based solution (NbS)" for climate adaptation and mitigation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2023
Ecosystems and Global Change Laboratory (LEMG-UFF), International Laboratory of Global Change (LINCGlobal), Biomass and Water Management Research Center (NAB), Fluminense Federal University, Av. Edmundo March, s/n, Niterói, RJ 24210-310, Brazil; Physical Geography Laboratory (LAGEF-UFF), Department of Geography, Graduate Program in Geography, Fluminense Federal University (UFF), Av. Gal. Milton Tavares de Souza, s/n, Niterói, RJ 24210-346, Brazil; Graduate Program in Geosciences (Environmental Geochemistry) Fluminense Federal University, Niterói, Brazil; Department of Geography, Graduate Program in Geography, State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ-FFP), Rua Dr. Francisco Portela, 1470, São Gonçalo, RJ 24435-005, Brazil. Electronic address:
Coastal eutrophication and urban flooding are increasingly important components of global change. Although increased seawater renewal by barrier openings and channelizing are common mitigation measures in coastal lagoons worldwide, their effects on these ecosystems are not fully understood. Here, we evaluated the relationships between human interventions in the watershed, artificial connections to the sea, and the sediment burial rates in an urban coastal lagoon (Maricá lagoon, Southeastern Brazil).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
September 2023
University of Technology Sydney, School of Life Sciences, 15 Broadway, Ultimo NSW 2007, Australia; Sydney Institute of Marine Sciences, Mosman, New South Wales 2088, Australia.
Microbes are sensitive indicators of estuarine processes because they respond rapidly to dynamic disturbance events. As most of the world's population lives in urban areas and climate change-related disturbance events are becoming more frequent, estuaries bounded by cities are experiencing increasing stressors, at the same time that their ecosystem services are required more than ever. Here, using a multidisciplinary approach, we determined the response of planktonic microbial assemblages in response to seasonality and a rainfall disturbance in an urban estuary bounded by Australia's largest city, Sydney.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Wound J
November 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, NSW, Australia.
Identifying the microbiome within chronic diabetic foot ulcers is essential if effective antimicrobial therapies are to be administered. Using culture and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the aim of this study was to compare the microbiome of paired tissue scraping samples with swab samples, collected from participants during attendance at a high-risk foot clinic. The mean richness of cultured swab and tissue scraping samples was consistent, with anaerobes infrequently isolated from both sample types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phycol
October 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia.
Sea urchins can cause extensive damage to kelp forests, and their overgrazing can create extensive barren areas, leading to a loss of biodiversity. Barrens may persist when the recruitment of kelp, which occurs through the microscopic haploid gametophyte stage, is suppressed. However, the ecology of kelp gametophytes is poorly understood, and here we investigate if grazing by juvenile urchins on kelp gametophytes can suppress kelp recruitment and if this is exacerbated by climate change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
July 2023
Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Military Road, East Lismore, NSW, 2480, Australia; National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, 2 Bay Drive, Coffs Harbour, NSW, 2450, Australia. Electronic address:
Filter feeding bivalves are useful bioindicators for the detection of biologically available pollutants. We investigated trace metals, metalloids, and pesticides in leaf oyster (Isognomon ephippium) soft tissue and shells and compared them to sediment in five estuaries in northern New South Wales, Australia. Concentrations of Pb, Cr, Mn, Ni, Fe and Al were higher in sediments, whereas Zn, Cd, Ag, Hg, Se and As bioaccumulated in the soft tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
August 2023
The University of Sydney, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Commun Biol
June 2023
National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, PO Box 4321, Coffs Harbour, NSW, 2450, Australia.
Phytoplankton abundance is decreasing and becoming more variable as the ocean climate changes. We examine how low, high, and variable phytoplankton food supply affected the survival, development, and growth of larval crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster sp. exposed to combined warming (26, 30 °C) and acidification (pH 8.
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