88 research outputs found
Abyssal hills: influence of topography on benthic foraminiferal assemblages
Abyssal plains, often thought of as vast flat areas, encompass a variety of terrains including abyssal hills, features that constitute the single largest landscape type on Earth. The potential influence on deep-sea benthic faunas of mesoscale habitat complexity arising from the presence of abyssal hills is still poorly understood. To address this issue we focus on benthic foraminifera (testate protists) in the >150-?m fraction of Megacorer samples (0–1 cm layer) collected at five different sites in the area of the Porcupine Abyssal Plain Sustained Observatory (NE Atlantic, 4850 m water depth). Three sites are located on the tops of small abyssal hills (200–500 m elevation) and two on the adjacent abyssal plain. We examined benthic foraminiferal assemblage characteristics (standing stock, diversity, composition) in relation to seafloor topography (hills vs. plain). Density and rarefied diversity were not significantly different between the hills and the plain. Nevertheless, hills do support a higher species density (i.e. species per unit area), a distinct fauna, and act to increase the regional species pool. Topographically enhanced bottom-water flows that influence food availability and sediment type are suggested as the most likely mechanisms responsible for these differences. Our findings highlight the potential importance of mesoscale heterogeneity introduced by relatively modest topography in regulating abyssal foraminiferal diversity. Given the predominance of abyssal hill terrain in the global ocean, we suggest the need to include faunal data from abyssal hills in assessments of abyssal ecology
Relationship between ‘live’ and dead benthic foraminiferal assemblages in the abyssal NE Atlantic
Dead foraminiferal assemblages within the sediment mixed layer provide an integrated, time-averaged view of the foraminiferal fauna, while the relationship between dead and live assemblages reflects the population dynamics of different species together with taphonomic processes operating over the last few hundred years. Here, we analysed four samples for ‘live’ (Rose-Bengal-stained) and dead benthic foraminifera (0–1 cm sediment layer, >150 ?m) from four sites in the area of the Porcupine Abyssal Plain Sustained Observatory (PAP-SO; NE Atlantic, 4850 m water depth). Two sites were located on abyssal hills and two on the adjacent abyssal plain. Our results indicate that the transition from live to dead benthic foraminiferal assemblages involved a dramatic loss of delicate agglutinated and organic-walled tests (e.g. Lagenammina, Nodellum, Reophax) with poor preservation potential, and to a lesser extent that of some relatively fragile calcareous tests (mostly miliolids), possibly a result of dissolution. Other processes, such as the transport of tests by bottom currents and predation, are unlikely to have substantially altered the composition of dead faunas. Positive live to dead ratios suggest that some species (notably Epistominella exigua and Bolivina spathulata) may have responded to recent phytodetritus input. Although the composition of live assemblages seemed to be influenced by seafloor topography (abyssal hills vs. plain), no such relation was found for dead assemblages. We suggest that PAP-SO fossil assemblages are likely to be comparable across topographically contrasting sites, and dominated by calcareous and some robust agglutinated forms with calcitic cement (e.g. Eggerella)
Transcriptional profiling of vaccine-induced immune responses in humans and non-human primates
There is an urgent need for pre-clinical and clinical biomarkers predictive of vaccine immunogenicity, efficacy and safety to reduce the risks and costs associated with vaccine development. Results emerging from immunoprofiling studies in non-human primates and humans demonstrate clearly that (i) type and duration of immune memory are largely determined by the magnitude and complexity of the innate immune signals and (ii) genetic signatures highly predictive of B-cell and T-cell responses can be identified for specific vaccines. For vaccines with similar composition, e.g. live attenuated viral vaccines, these signatures share common patterns. Signatures predictive of vaccine efficacy have been identified in a few experimental challenge studies. This review aims to give an overview of the current literature on immunoprofiling studies in humans and also presents some of our own data on profiling of licensed and experimental vaccines in non-human primates
Virialization of high redshift dark matter haloes
We present results of a study of the virial state of high redshift dark
matter haloes in an N-body simulation. We find that the majority of collapsed,
bound haloes are not virialized at any redshift slice in our study ()
and have excess kinetic energy. At these redshifts, merging is still rampant
and the haloes cannot strictly be treated as isolated systems. To assess if
this excess kinetic energy arises from the environment, we include the surface
pressure term in the virial equation explicitly and relax the assumption that
the density at the halo boundary is zero. Upon inclusion of the surface term,
we find that the haloes are much closer to virialization, however, they still
have some excess kinetic energy. We report trends of the virial ratio including
the extra surface term with three key halo properties: spin, environment, and
concentration. We find that haloes with closer neighbors depart more from
virialization, and that haloes with larger spin parameters do as well. We
conclude that except at the lowest masses (M < 10^6 \Msun), dark matter
haloes at high redshift are not fully virialized. This finding has interesting
implications for galaxy formation at these high redshifts, as the excess
kinetic energy will impact the subsequent collapse of baryons and the formation
of the first disks and/or baryonic structures.Comment: 5 pages, Accepted to MNRA
Angular momentum and clustering properties of early dark matter halos
In this paper we study the angular momentum properties of simulated dark
matter halos at high redshift that likely host the first stars in the Universe.
Calculating the spin distributions of these 10^6 - 10^7 \Msun halos in
redshift slices from , we find that they are well fit by a
log-normal distribution as is found for lower redshift and more massive halos
in earlier work. We find that both the mean value of the spin and dispersion
are largely unchanged with redshift for all halos. Our key result is that
subsamples of low and high spin 10^6 \Msun and 10^7 \Msun halos show
difference in clustering strength. In both mass bins, higher spin halos are
more strongly clustered in concordance with a tidal torquing picture for the
growth of angular momentum in dark matter halos in the CDM paradigm.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted MNRA
Autonomous marine environmental monitoring: Application in decommissioned oil fields
Hundreds of Oil & Gas Industry structures in the marine environment are approaching decommissioning. In most areas decommissioning operations will need to be supported by environmental assessment and monitoring, potentially over the life of any structures left in place. This requirement will have a considerable cost for industry and the public. Here we review approaches for the assessment of the primary operating environments associated with decommissioning — namely structures, pipelines, cuttings piles, the general seabed environment and the water column — and show that already available marine autonomous systems (MAS) offer a wide range of solutions for this major monitoring challenge. Data of direct relevance to decommissioning can be collected using acoustic, visual, and oceanographic sensors deployed on MAS. We suggest that there is considerable potential for both cost savings and a substantial improvement in the temporal and spatial resolution of environmental monitoring. We summarise the trade-offs between MAS and current conventional approaches to marine environmental monitoring. MAS have the potential to successfully carry out much of the monitoring associated with decommissioning and to offer viable alternatives where a direct match for the conventional approach is not possible
Big in the benthos: future change of seafloor community biomass in a global, body size-resolved model
Deep-water benthic communities in the ocean are almost wholly dependent on near-surface pelagic ecosystems for their supply of energy and material resources. Primary production in sunlit surface waters is channelled through complex food webs that extensively recycle organic material, but lose a fraction as particulate organic carbon (POC) that sinks into the ocean interior. This exported production is further rarefied by microbial breakdown in the abyssal ocean, but a residual ultimately drives diverse assemblages of seafloor heterotrophs. Advances have led to an understanding of the importance of size (body mass) in structuring these communities. Here we force a size-resolved benthic biomass model, BORIS, using seafloor POC flux from a coupled ocean-biogeochemistry model, NEMO-MEDUSA, to investigate global patterns in benthic biomass. BORIS resolves 16 size-classes of metazoans, successively doubling in mass from approximately 1μg to 28mg. Simulations find a wide range of seasonal responses to differing patterns of POC forcing, with both a decline in seasonal variability, and an increase in peak lag times with increasing body size. However, the dominant factor for modelled benthic communities is the integrated magnitude of POC reaching the seafloor rather than its seasonal pattern. Scenarios of POC forcing under climate change and ocean acidification are then applied to investigate how benthic communities may change under different future conditions. Against a backdrop of falling surface primary production (-6.1%), and driven by changes in pelagic remineralisation with depth, results show that while benthic communities in shallow seas generally show higher biomass in a warmed world (+3.2%), deep-sea communities experience a substantial decline (-32%) under a high greenhouse gas emissions scenario. Our results underscore the importance for benthic ecology of reducing uncertainty in the magnitude and seasonality of seafloor POC fluxes, as well as the importance of studying a broader range of seafloor environments for future model development
Integrating ocean observations across body‐size classes to deliver benthic invertebrate abundance and distribution information
Invertebrate animals living at the seafloor make up a prominent component of life globally, spanning 10 orders of magnitude in body size over 71% of Earth's surface. However, integrating information across sizes and sampling methodologies has limited our understanding of the influence of natural variation, climate change and human activity. Here, we outline maturing practices that can underpin both the feasibility and impact of establishing Benthic Invertebrate Abundance and Distribution as a Global Ocean Observing System—Essential Ocean Variable, including: (1) quantifying individual body size, (2) identifying the well-quantified portions of sampled body-size spectra, (3) taking advantage of (semi-)automated information processing, (4) application of metadata standards such as Darwin Core, and (5) making data available through internationally recognized access points. These practices enable broader-scale analysis supporting research and sustainable development, such as assessments of indicator taxa, biodiversity, biomass, and the modeling of carbon stocks and flows that are contiguous over time and space
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Sunny windy Sundays
Rapid expansion of wind and solar capacity in Great Britain presents challenges for managing electricity systems. One concern is the reduction in system inertia during periods where renewables provide a high proportion of demand which has led to some networks imposing system nonsynchronous penetration limits. However, given the lack of operational data, the relationship between
renewable generation and demand for the full range of meteorological conditions experienced in Great
Britain is poorly understood. This study uses reanalysis datasets to determine the proportion of
demand from renewable generation on an hourly resolution for a 36-year period.
The days with highest penetration of renewables tend to be sunny, windy weekend days between May
and September, when there is a significant contribution of both wind and solar generation and demand
is suppressed due to human behaviour. Based on the current distribution of wind and solar capacity,
there is very little curtailment for all system non-synchronous penetration limits considered. However,
as installed capacity of renewables grows the volume of generation curtailed also increases with a
disproportionate volume occurring at weekends. The total volume of curtailment is highly dependent
on ratio of wind and solar capacity, with the current blend close to the optimum level
Spin and structural halo properties at high redshift in a LCDM Universe
In this paper, we examine in detail the key structural properties of high
redshift dark matter haloes as a function of their spin parameter. We perform
and analyze high resolution cosmological simulations of the formation of
structure in a LCDM Universe. We study the mass function, ellipticities,
shapes, density profiles, rotation curves and virialization for a large sample
of dark matter haloes from z = 15 - 6. We also present detailed convergence
tests for individual haloes. We find that high spin haloes have stronger
clustering strengths (up to 25%) at all mass and redshift ranges at these early
epochs. High redshift spherical haloes are also up to 50% more clustered than
aspherical haloes. High spin haloes at these redshifts are also preferentially
found in high density environments, and have more neighbors than their low spin
counterparts. We report a systematic offset in the peak of the circular
velocity curves for high and low spin haloes of the same mass. Therefore,
estimating halo masses without knowledge of the spin, using only the circular
velocity can yield errors of up to 40%. The strong dependence of key structural
properties on spin that we report here likely have important implications for
studies of star formation and feedback from these galaxies.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures. Accepted to MNRAS
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