Gerdts, Matthew James Slater (ZAF)) AWI Strategy funding project OMAP - Oysters and mussels under anthropogenic pressure: Does microplastic limit the tolerance to climate change of ecologically and economically
Mussel beds in the subtidal zone of the Wadden Sea Assessments Book about marine litter Marine Anthropogenic Litter Leading experts aggregate the existing knowledge on marine litter Invasive Species Neobiota
nutrient uptake in phytoplankton for future net primary production, and time of emergence of anthropogenically induced trends in dissolved organic matter in Earth system model simulations. I am currently
fulfil a key role in the control of global environmental processes; they are also subject to anthropogenic use. Though the strains on them are especially apparent in coastal regions and shelf seas, where
and classification tasks in marine passive acoustic data, both for biological sounds as well as anthropogenic sounds. www.researchgate.net/profile/Elena_Schall Dr. Ilse van Opzeeland I see sound as an invaluable [...] marine mammal diversity via their acoustic behavior. I am particularly interested in the impact of anthropogenic noise on polar ocean soundscapes and its impact on the soundscape and (acoustic) ecology of marine
nutrient uptake in phytoplankton for future net primary production, and time of emergence of anthropogenically induced trends in dissolved organic matter in Earth system model simulations. I am currently
Arctic Marine Ecosystems” SiDe- EFFECT (2021-2026) SideEFFECT (Graphic: Mar Fernández-Méndez) Anthropogenic climate change is modifying the ocean at scales previously unimaginable. One of the most obvious
ecological network approach to retrospectively analyse and forecast multilevel health impacts of anthropogenic stressors on the Baltic Sea ecosystem I. Eulaers, T. Härkönen, J.-P. Desforges, K. Hårding, F
disciplines at the Alfred Wegener Institute were investigating how the carbon cycle has altered by anthropogenic influence and how this affects the oceans. But it took ten years after the working group started
Wegener Institut) Oceans as a carbon store The oceans have absorbed more than a fourth of the anthropogenically generated atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past 200 years. Without this natural store the