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Jérôme OLLIER

Smoke and Mirrors on Coral Reefs: How a Tiny Fish Deceives its Prey - @UniBasel - 0 views

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    Basel Zoologists are unveiling the colorful secrets of coral reefs: On the Australian Great Barrier Reef they discovered a coral reef fish, the dusky dottyback that flexibly adapts its coloration to mimic other fishes and in doing is able to prey on their juvenile offspring. By changing colors, the dusky dottyback also decreases its risk of being detected by predators. The study has been published in the latest issue of the renowned scientific journal Current Biology.
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    Basel Zoologists are unveiling the colorful secrets of coral reefs: On the Australian Great Barrier Reef they discovered a coral reef fish, the dusky dottyback that flexibly adapts its coloration to mimic other fishes and in doing is able to prey on their juvenile offspring. By changing colors, the dusky dottyback also decreases its risk of being detected by predators. The study has been published in the latest issue of the renowned scientific journal Current Biology.
Jérôme OLLIER

PERSPECTIVE: drawing connections between Ningaloo and Great Barrier reefs - @SNWA - 0 views

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    Coral reefs are the most diverse of all marine systems. They are however, threatened by global change and we can only predict how it will impact these reef systems if we first understand how they work.
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    Coral reefs are the most diverse of all marine systems. They are however, threatened by global change and we can only predict how it will impact these reef systems if we first understand how they work.
Jérôme OLLIER

L'Australie encerclé par le cyclone TREVOR et la future tempête VERONICA - @C... - 0 views

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    L'Australie encerclé par le cyclone TREVOR et la future tempête VERONICA.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @NickDulvy - Unique programme to count Indo-Pacific's sharks and rays - @jcu - 0 views

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    A new research programme is underway to count species of sharks and rays across the Indo-Pacific region.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @SeaSaver - Angler catches rare sawfish off Queensland coast - @couriermail - 0 views

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    Brisbane, Fast, First: Angler catches rare sawfish off Queensland coast.
Jérôme OLLIER

Plastic pollution kills half a million hermit crabs on remote islands - @guardianeco - 0 views

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    Plastic pollution kills half a million hermit crabs on remote islands.
Jérôme OLLIER

Seasonal Monsoon Rains Block Key Ocean Current - @NASA - 0 views

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    Our oceans and the complex "conveyer belt" system of currents that connects them play an important role in regulating global climate. The oceans store heat from the Sun, and ocean currents transport that heat from the tropics to the poles. They release the heat and moisture into the air, which moderates climate nearby. But what happens if part of that conveyer belt jams?
Jérôme OLLIER

Pacific Opens Up For @YannickBestaven, @ThomasRuyant Back to Race Pace - @VendeeGlobe - 0 views

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    After Thomas RUYANT suffered water ingress into his bow compartment and had to stop LinkedOut yesterday night (French time, Thursday morning local time) Yannick BESTAVEN now has a clear lead on Maître Coq IV as the leaders passed under Tasmania and across what is generally considered to be the western boundary of the Pacific Ocean.
Jérôme OLLIER

Some fin good! Four shark facts from science - @CSIRO - 0 views

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    Sharks are among Earth's most ancient creatures. We still have lots to learn about them, but what we know from science is fin-tastic.
Jérôme OLLIER

A regional map of mangrove extent for Myanmar, Thailand, and Cambodia shows losses of 4... - 0 views

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    Southeast Asia is home to some of the planet's most carbon-dense and biodiverse mangrove ecosystems. There is still much uncertainty with regards to the timing and magnitude of changes in mangrove cover over the past 50 years. While there are several regional to global maps of mangrove extent in Southeast Asia over the past two decades, data prior to the mid-1990s is limited due to the scarcity of Earth Observation (EO) data of sufficient quality and the historical limitations to publicly available EO. Due to this literature gap and research demand in Southeast Asia, we conducted a classification of mangrove extent using Landsat 1-2 MSS Tier 2 data from 1972 to 1977 for three Southeast Asian countries: Myanmar, Thailand, and Cambodia. Mangrove extent land cover maps were generated using a Random Forest machine learning algorithm that effectively mapped a total of 15,420.51 km2. Accuracy assessments indicated that the classification for the mangrove and non-mangrove class had a producer's accuracy of 80% and 98% user's accuracy of 90% and 96%, and an overall accuracy of 95%. We found a decline of 6,830 km2 between the 1970s and 2020, showing that 44% of the mangrove area in these countries has been lost in the past 48 years. Most of this loss occurred between the 1970s and 1996; rates of deforestation declined dramatically after 1996. This study also elaborated on the nature of mangrove change within the context of the social and political ecology of each case study country. We urge the remote sensing community to empathetically consider the local need of those who depend on mangrove resources when discussing mangrove loss drivers.
Jérôme OLLIER

Quantifying the controlling mineral phases of rare-earth elements in deep-sea pelagic s... - 0 views

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    Recent studies suggest that pelagic sediments can enrich rare-earth elements (REE) acting as a significant reservoir for the global REE budget as well as a potential resource for future exploitation. Although Ca-phosphate (e.g., bioapatite fossils) and Fe-Mn (oxyhydr)oxides (e.g., micronodule) have been considered important REE carriers in deep-sea sediments, the proportion of REE held by each mineral phase remains enigmatic. Here, we have investigated the sediments from two promising REE-rich prospective areas: the Tiki Basin in the Southeast Pacific (TKB) and the Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB). The mineral grains including bioapatite fossils and Fe-Mn micronodules have been inspected individually by in-situ microscale analytical methods. Correspondently, the REE bound to Ca-phosphate and Fe-Mn (oxyhydr)oxides have been sequentially extracted and quantified. The crucial role of Ca-phosphate is substantiated by sequential leaching which reveals its dominance in hosting ~69.3-89.4% of total REE. The Fe-Mn (oxyhydr)oxides carry ~8.2% to 22.0% of REE in bulk sediments, but they account for ~70.0-80.5% of Ce owing to their preferential adsorption of Ce over the other REE. Surface sediment on modern seafloor can accumulate high REE contents resulting from the REE scavenging by the host phases within the range of sediment-seawater interface. Differences between TKB and CIOB samples indicate that the REE enrichment in the deep-sea environment may be controlled by multiple factors including the productivity of overlying seawater (e.g., phosphorus flux), water depth relative to carbonate compensation depth (CCD), sedimentation rate, redox condition, and hydrothermal vent input (e.g., Fe-Mn precipitations).
Jérôme OLLIER

If you think rivers are what send terrestrial rainfall back into the oceans, you don't ... - 0 views

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    Under the surface.
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    Under the surface.
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