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Jérôme OLLIER

Team Sanya, le retour - Volvo Ocean Race - 0 views

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    Le sixième concurrent de la Volvo Ocean Race a annoncé hier qu'il allait boucler à la voile la première partie de l'étape 2. Team Sanya avait cassé un hauban dans l'océan Indien et est en escale technique à Madagascar.
Jérôme OLLIER

Corals track strongest Indian Ocean current over 334 years - CORALCOE - 0 views

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    Natural variations in the warming and cooling cycles of the globally important Agulhas ocean current core region have been revealed in a new study of a Madagascar corals led by The University of Western Australia including researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and published in Nature Scientific Reports.
Jérôme OLLIER

Madagascar fishing villagers learn that the way to survive is not to catch fish - @guar... - 0 views

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    Blue Ventures conservationists show a struggling people that the answer is marine protection.
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    Blue Ventures conservationists show a struggling people that the answer is marine protection.
Jérôme OLLIER

Scientists Identify New Species of Damselfish - @Scripps_Ocean - 0 views

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    New study co-authored by Scripps Oceanography identifies Corazon's Damsel, a previously unknown species of damselfish found off Madagascar.
Jérôme OLLIER

Researchers confirm timeline of human presence on Madagascar - @penn_state - 0 views

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    Systematic review of archaeological radiocarbon dates resulted in the most comprehensive database of radiocarbon dates for the island.
Jérôme OLLIER

Chasing the Far, Far Away Fish - @hakaimagazine - 0 views

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    Each year, an increasing number of traditional fishers from southwestern Madagascar sail away from their villages, seeking ever-dwindling fish stocks far from home.
Jérôme OLLIER

Cyclone Impacts on Coral Reef Communities in Southwest Madagascar - @FrontMarineSci - 0 views

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    Tropical cyclones can cause severe destruction of coral reefs with ecological consequences for reef fish communities. Ocean warming is predicted to shorten the return interval for strong tropical cyclones. Understanding the consequences of cyclone impacts on coral reefs is critical to inform local-scale management to support reef resilience and the livelihood security of small-scale fishing communities. Here, we present the first analysis of a tropical cyclone disturbance on coral reefs in Madagascar. We investigate the impact of Cyclone Haruna (category 3 Saffir-Simpson scale) in February 2013 on coral communities, both adults and recruits, and explore the relationship between the severity of cyclone impact with cyclone parameters (wind speed, duration of storm impact and distance from cyclone track) and environmental variables (reef type and reef depth). We use survey data collected as part of a long-term citizen science monitoring programme at 21 coral reef sites between 2012 and 2015 in the Velondriake Locally Managed Marine Area along Madagascar's southwest coast. Coral cover declined at 19 sites, however damage was spatially heterogeneous ranging from a decrease in coral cover of 1.4% to 45.8%. We found the severity of cyclone damage related to: distance from the cyclone track, duration of cyclone impact and reef depth. The taxonomic and morphological composition of coral communities was significantly different after the cyclone. Notably, there was a decrease in the dominance of branching morphologies, and an increase in the relative abundance of encrusting and massive morphologies. Two years after Cyclone Haruna, mean coral cover had increased and the density of coral recruits increased to above pre-cyclone levels indicating the potential recovery of coral populations. However, recovery to pre-disturbance community composition will likely be hindered by the increasing occurrence of acute and chronic disturbance events.
Jérôme OLLIER

"Nous voilà en Afrique !" - Volvo Ocean Race - 0 views

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    Team Sanya est arrivé aujourd'hui à Madagascar. Course suspendue pour hauban cassé, l'équipage va y organiser la réparation de son gréement. Ou comment 11 marins de la Volvo Ocean Race débarquent sur le territoire malgache.
Jérôme OLLIER

Robots to identify what makes the Indian Ocean tick - @CSIROnews - 0 views

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    A fleet of floating bio-robots will be deployed between Christmas Island and Madagascar next week to help gain an understanding of the physical and biological workings of the crucially important Indian Ocean.
Jérôme OLLIER

Fishing Effort and Associated Catch per Unit Effort for Small-Scale Fisheries in the Mo... - 0 views

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    The Mozambique Channel region in East Africa has diverse marine ecosystems and serves as a migratory corridor for economically important species. Local and foreign industrial fisheries operate in the Mozambique Channel, but regional small-scale fisheries are the crucially important fisheries that provide food security, livelihoods, and economic opportunities for rural coastal communities. This study reconstructed and investigated trends in the fishing effort and catch per unit effort (CPUE) of small-scale marine fisheries in four Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) that constitute the Mozambique Channel, i.e., Union of Comoros, Madagascar, Mayotte, and Mozambique, from 1950 to 2016. Effective fishing effort for small-scale fisheries in the form of fishing capacity in kWdays (i.e., kilowatt days) was derived using the number, length, motorization (engine power) by fishing vessels, as well as an approximate human-powered equivalent for shore-based fishers without vessels, as well as days of fishing per year. Effective small-scale fishing effort in the Mozambique Channel increased by nearly 60 times from just over 386,000 kWdays in 1950 to over 23 million kWdays in 2016. Correspondingly, the overall small-scale CPUE, based on previously and independently reconstructed catch data declined by 91% in the region as a whole, from just under 175 kg⋅kWday-1 in the early 1950s to just over 15 kg⋅kWday-1 in recent years. All four EEZs showed the strongest declines in the small-scale CPUE in the earlier decades, driven by motorization and growth in vessel numbers impacting effective fishing effort. Increased motorization combined with a substantial growth in overall vessel numbers were the drivers of the increasing fishing effort and decreasing CPUE, and clearly suggest that continuing to increase the fishing capacity of small-scale fisheries in the absence of effective and restrictive management actions may exacerbate overexploitation risk.
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