Marine Research
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Origin | United Kingdom |
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Record labels | K Records |
Albums | Sounds from the Gulf Stream |
Genres | Indie Rock |
Twee Pop | |
Skos genre | Alternative/Indie |
Active from | 1997 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2322903 |
About Marine Research
Marine Research were an indiepop group, based in Oxford/London, formed in 1997 by four of the five members of Heavenly, following the death of Heavenly drummer Mathew Fletcher. The band were joined on drums by DJ Downfall, who is also a solo recording artist.
What is the UN High Seas Treaty and why is it needed?
... Which marine species are at risk? In the latest assessment of marine species, nearly 10% were found to be at risk of extinction, Dr Ngozi Oguguah, chief research officer at Nigerian Institute For Oceanography and Marine Research said: " The two biggest causes [of extinction] are overfishing and pollution...
Electric car future may depend on deep sea mining
... The chief scientist on board, Henko de Stigter of the Dutch Marine Research institute NIOZ, points out that life in the deep Pacific - where mining is likely to start first - has adapted to the usually crystal clear conditions ...
Victor Vescovo: adventurer deepest ocean, reaching locations
... You re starting to see more privately funded Marine Research carried out by wealthy individuals bought the subs they thought they would drug the use of as a party, but now use to give full scientific expeditions, to the people like Al Jamieson of a platform...
Antarctic krill: Key food source moves south
... Margaret McBride, of the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research in Bergen, has written, in the same issue of Nature Climate Change...
Antarctic krill: Key food source moves south
A keystone prey species in the Southern Ocean is retreating towards the Antarctic because of Climate Change .
Krill are small, shrimp-like creatures that swarm in vast numbers and form a major part of the diets of whales, penguins, seabirds, seals and fish.
Scientists say warming conditions in recent decades have led to the Krill contracting poleward.
If The Shift is maintained, it will have negative ecosystem impacts, they warn.
Already there is some evidence that macaroni penguins and fur seals may be finding it harder to get enough of the Krill to support their populations.
"Our results suggest that over The Past 40 Years , the amount of Krill has, on average, gone down, and also the location of the Krill has contracted to much less of the habitat. That suggests all these other animals that eat Krill will face much more intense competition with each other for this important food resource," Simeon Hill from The British Antarctic Survey told Bbc News .
The study is published.
Krill sit near The Base of a food web that supports some of the biggest animals on The PlanetIt focuses on the Scotia Sea and the Antarctic Peninsula - the places where the crustaceans are most abundant.
Scientists have been gathering data in these areas since the 1920s.
Initially, Krill catches were recorded to understand the environmental consequences of commercial whaling, but The Information has continued to be collected through to The Present .
Dr Hill and colleagues say The Change in the distribution and density of the crustaceans is a clear signal that emerges in the data from the late 1980s onwards.
It coincides with a phase change in a climate oscillation known as the Southern Annular Mode.
The SAM essentially describes the dominant pattern of pressure zones in the southern hemisphere outside of the tropics.
The mode's switch in state in the late 80s produced warmer, cloudier, windier weather, and much less sea-ice in those areas where the Krill had tended to congregate.
The larval stage of the crustaceans in particular has been strongly associated with The Presence of a sea-ice habitat.
Predicted changes under wayThe team's analysis indicates the centre of Krill distribution has now moved to where more favourable conditions are found, tracking southward towards the Antarctic continent by about 440km, or four degrees of latitude.
"The average size of Krill has lengthened over this period of time as well," said Dr Hill.
"And that's because the population has increasingly become dominated by older and larger animals. This is a result of a decline in The Number of Krill entering the population - what we call juvenile recruitment. "
Margaret Mcbride , from the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research in Bergen, has written in the same edition of Nature Climate Change .
She Said models had predicted that Krill would shift southwards in The Future , whereas the new research suggested this contraction was already under way.
"It offers a profoundly adverse, but highly plausible, endgame for Antarctic Krill that has serious implications for both the Southern Ocean food web and sustainable management of fisheries targeting this species," she wrote.
The Krill do not only support marine mammals and seabirds; an international fishery also extracts something on The Order of a quarter of a million tonnes of the crustaceans each year in the Antarctic region.
The Campaign group WWF-UK said the study showed "the need to protect The Waters off the Antarctic Peninsula with an effective network of marine protected areas - placing conservation above fishing interests. "
environment, nature, british antarctic survey, whales, oceans, antarctic, climate change
Source of news: bbc.com