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Jérôme OLLIER

Four mysteries of the Indian Ocean - CSIRO - 0 views

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    Despite being the third largest ocean in the world, the Indian Ocean is one of the least explored marine environments. Covering around 20 per cent of the Earth's surface and spanning more than 73 million square kilometres, it's an important channel for over half the world's shipping.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @OCEANUSLive - Ship carrying cattle sinks en route to UAE - @TheNationalUAE - 0 views

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    The ship was on its way from Somalia to the Emirates when it sank off Sur in the province of Asharqiyah around 2pm.
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    The ship was on its way from Somalia to the Emirates when it sank off Sur in the province of Asharqiyah around 2pm.
Jérôme OLLIER

Study Suggests Crash Location of MH370 near 25°S, North of Underwater Search ... - 0 views

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    New analysis uses ocean currents, debris found to locate probable crash site.
Jérôme OLLIER

Suspected MH370 part found off Mozambique suggests it was not under control of a pilot ... - 0 views

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    A piece of aircraft wreckage found off Mozambique, believed to be from flight MH370, has added strength to the belief the plane was not under the control of a pilot when it crashed.
Jérôme OLLIER

The Decline and Recovery of a Crab Population From an Extreme Marine Heatwave and a Cha... - 0 views

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    Driven by a very strong La Niña event and a record strength Leeuwin Current, the 2011 Western Australian marine heatwave (MHW) raised sea surface temperatures (SSTs) along the Western Australian coastline by up to 5°C between November 2010 and March 2011. This single thermal perturbation led to several mortality events and recruitment impairment of commercially important species including Australia's single highest producing blue swimmer crab (Portunus armatus) fishery in Shark Bay. Monthly catch landings dramatically declined from 166 t in April 2011 to 24°C, and detrimental when they exceed 26°C as was the case during the 2011 MHW when SSTs reached 29°C inside Shark Bay. Partial recovery of the crab stock 18 months after the MHW was strongly associated with mean summer temperatures returning below 24°C. Together with a change in management to a quota system, the fishery returned to full recovery status in 2018 with sustainable catch levels of up to 550 t. Long term productivity of this fishery is now at high risk from climate change impacts with shifts in winter water temperatures being cooler by 2°C and occurring earlier by few months inside the Bay. This cooling trend appears to be impacting the spawning period with the timing of peak recruitment also occurring earlier, shifting from February to November. The impacts of the 2011 MHW highlighted the risk to stock sustainability through external drivers such as climate change that was previously poorly understood. The south-west region of Western Australia is considered a climate change hotspot with water temperatures rising at rates above global trends and at inc
Jérôme OLLIER

Lost Australia diver swam miles to shore stalked by shark - @AFP via @physorg_com - 0 views

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    Lost Australia diver swam miles to shore stalked by shark.
Jérôme OLLIER

Hardy corals take to the seas to build new reefs from scratch - @UofGlasgow - 0 views

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    Tough species of corals can go mobile and lay the foundations for new reefs in otherwise inhospitable areas, a study shows.
Jérôme OLLIER

New mathematical approach tested for the search of flight MH370 - @EurekAlert - 0 views

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    New mathematical approach tested for the search of flight MH370.
Jérôme OLLIER

A Shipwreck's Incalculable Toll on a Remote Reef - @hakaimpagazine - 0 views

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    After a fishing boat ran aground on a fragile atoll, the consequences for the ecosystem were alarming-and curious.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @MBSociety - Simulated zonal current characteristics in the southeastern tropical I... - 0 views

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    Detailed ocean currents in the southeastern tropical Indian Ocean adjacent to southern Sumatran and Javan coasts have not been fully explained because of limited observations. In this study, zonal current characteristics in the region have been studied using simulation results of a 1/8∘ global hybrid coordinate ocean model from 1950 to 2013. The simulated zonal currents across three meridional sections were then investigated using an empirical orthogonal function (EOF), where the first three modes account for 75 %-98 % of the total variance. The first temporal mode of EOF is then investigated using ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD) to distinguish the signals. This study has revealed distinctive features of currents in the South Java Current (SJC) region, the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF)-South Equatorial Current (SEC) region, and the transition zone between these regions. The vertical structures of zonal currents in southern Java and offshore Sumatra are characterized by a one-layer flow. Conversely, a two-layer flow is observed in the nearshore and transition regions of Sumatra. Current variation in the SJC region has peak energies that are sequentially dominated by semiannual, intraseasonal, and annual timescales. Meanwhile, the transition zone is characterized by semiannual and intraseasonal periods with pronounced interannual variations. In contrast, interannual variability associated with El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) modulates the prominent intraseasonal variability of current in the ITF-SEC region. ENSO has the strongest influence at the outflow ITF, while the IOD's strongest influence is in southwestern Sumatra, with the ENSO (IOD) leading the current by 4 months (1 month). Moreover, the contributions (largest to smallest) of each EEMD mode at the nearshore of Java and offshore Sumatra are intraseasonal, semiannual, annual, interannual, and long-term fluctuations. The contribution of long-term
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @NOCmarinePhys Effect of Tides on the Indonesian Seas Circulation and Their Role on... - 0 views

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    The effect of tides on the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF) is explored in a regional ocean model of South East Asia. Our model simulations, with and without tidal forcing, reveal that tides drive only a modest increase in the ITF volume, heat and salt transports toward the Indian Ocean. However, tides drive large regional changes in these transports through Lombok Strait, Ombai Strait and the Timor Sea, and regulate the partitioning of the ITF amongst them. The effect of tidal mixing on the salinity and temperature profiles within the Indonesian Seas drives a small decrease in the heat and salt transports toward the Indian Ocean in all three exit passages. In contrast, the tidal residual circulation due to the interaction between the tides and the topography and stratification (including the effects of tidal mixing on the circulation) leads to a large decrease in the transports toward the Indian Ocean through the Lombok and Ombai straits, but a large increase through the Timor Sea. Hence, the small net contribution from tides to the ITF's volume, heat and salt transports is due to a compensation between large, but opposing tidal residual transports at the combined Lombok and Ombai straits and in the Timor Sea. Our results indicate that explicit representation of tides, often missing in Earth system models, is necessary to accurately capture the ITF's pathway and so the tracer transport from the Pacific into the Indian Ocean.
Jérôme OLLIER

Influence of Indo-Pacific ocean currents on the distribution and demographic patterns o... - 0 views

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    Long-distance drifting of seaweeds driven by ocean currents is an ideal model for exploring population-level genetic connectivity and phylogeographic structure. In the Indo-Pacific convergence region, we integrated phylogeographic and ocean current data and Lagrangian particle simulations to explore how the ocean currents contributed to the biogeographical patterns and population genetic connectivity of Sargassum polycystum. The oceanographic transport and direction of gene flow was in line with contemporary ocean currents. The S. polycystum geographical dispersal from glacial refugia homogenized the footprint of genetic divergence. The multidisciplinary intersection provides insights into the evolutionary history and biogeographic conservation of tropical seaweeds in the Indo-Pacific convergence region.
Jérôme OLLIER

The Agulhas Leakage south of Africa holds new surprises - @GEOMAR_en - 0 views

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    New GEOMAR study investigates decadal variations of Agulhas leakage and their influence on the Gulf Stream system.
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