188 research outputs found
Vida y muerte en los grupos megalíticos del interior de la Península Ibérica. La cuenca del Tajo como modelo
Gracias a los estudios realizados en los últimos afios en la zona interior de la Península
Ibérica, especialmente en la cuenca del Tajo, se puede ir descartando la idea de una amplia área despoblada
durante el neolítico. Se presentan aquí los resultados y conclusiones de un estudio complementario de las zonas
de habitación y las funerarias en distintos puntos de la Meseta Sur, así como una valoración de la secuencia
poblacional y las transformaciones socioeconómicas del Neolítico-Bronce en la zona
Dynamic prokaryotic communities in the dark western Mediterranean Sea
Dark ocean microbial dynamics are fundamental to understand ecosystem metabolism and ocean biogeochemical processes. Yet, the ecological response of deep ocean communities to environmental perturbations remains largely unknown. Temporal and spatial dynamics of the meso- and bathypelagic prokaryotic communities were assessed throughout a 2-year seasonal sampling across the western Mediterranean Sea. A common pattern of prokaryotic communities’ depth stratification was observed across the different regions and throughout the seasons. However, sporadic and drastic alterations of the community composition and diversity occurred either at specific water masses or throughout the aphotic zone and at a basin scale. Environmental changes resulted in a major increase in the abundance of rare or low abundant phylotypes and a profound change of the community composition. Our study evidences the temporal dynamism of dark ocean prokaryotic communities, exhibiting long periods of stability but also drastic changes, with implications in community metabolism and carbon fluxes. Taken together, the results highlight the importance of monitoring the temporal patterns of dark ocean prokaryotic communities.Versión del editor2,92
Dynamics of actively dividing prokaryotes in the western Mediterranean Sea
Microbial community metabolism and functionality play a key role modulating global biogeochemical
processes. However, the metabolic activities and contribution of actively growing prokaryotes to
ecosystem energy fluxes remain underexplored. Here we describe the temporal and spatial dynamics
of active prokaryotes in the different water masses of the Mediterranean Sea using a combination
of bromodeoxyuridine labelling and 16S rRNA gene Illumina sequencing. Bulk and actively dividing
prokaryotic communities were drastically different and depth stratified. Alteromonadales were rare
in bulk communities (contributing 0.1% on average) but dominated the actively dividing community
throughout the overall water column (28% on average). Moreover, temporal variability of actively
dividing Alteromonadales oligotypes was evinced. SAR86, Actinomarinales and Rhodobacterales
contributed on average 3–3.4% each to the bulk and 11, 8.4 and 8.5% to the actively dividing
communities in the epipelagic zone, respectively. SAR11 and Nitrosopumilales contributed less
to the actively dividing than to the bulk communities during all the study period. Noticeably, the
large contribution of these two taxa to the total prokaryotic communities (23% SAR11 and 26%
Nitrosopumilales), especially in the meso- and bathypelagic zones, results in important contributions
to actively dividing communities (11% SAR11 and 12% Nitrosopumilales). The intense temporal and
spatial variability of actively dividing communities revealed in this study strengthen the view of a
highly dynamic deep ocean. Our results suggest that some rare or low abundant phylotypes from
surface layers down to the deep sea can disproportionally contribute to the activity of the prokaryotic
communities, exhibiting a more dynamic response to environmental changes than other abundant
phylotypes, emphasizing the role they might have in community metabolism and biogeochemical
processes.This research has been supported by RADMED-TRES (2015–2019) and ATHAPOC (CTM2014-54374-R) projects, funded by the Spanish Institute of Oceanography and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, respectively. CM was supported by pre-doctoral FPI fellowship from Conselleria d’Innovació, Recerca i Turisme of the regional Government of the Balearic Islands, co-financed by the European Social Fund as part of the FSE 2014-2020 operational program.Postprin
Thermohaline evolution of the Western Mediterranean Deep Waters since 2005: diffusive stages and interannual renewal injections
A large production of anomalous dense water in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea during winter 2005 led to a widespread abrupt shift in Western Mediterranean deep waters characteristics. This new configuration, the so-called Western Mediterranean Transition (WMT), involved a complex thermohaline structure that was tracked over time through a deep hydrographic station located NE of Minorca Island, sampled 37 times between 2004 and 2017. In this study, the thermohaline evolution of the WMT signal is analyzed in detail. Using a 1-D diffusion model sensitive to double-diffusive mixing phenomena, the contribution to the heat and salt budgets of the deep Western Mediterranean in terms of ventilation and diffusive transference from the intermediate layers above is disentangled. Results show distinct stages in the evolution of the deep waters, driven by background diffusion and intermittent injections of new waters. The progression of a multilayered structure in the deep ocean is well represented through existing parameterizations of salt fingering and diffusive layering processes and makes it possible to infer an independent estimate of regional background diffusivity consistent with current knowledge. Overall, the deep layers of the Western Mediterranean underwent substantial warming (0.059 °C) and salt increase (0.021) between 2004 and 2017, mostly dominated by injections of dense waters in the 2005–2006 and 2011–2013 periods. Thus, within the WMT period, heat uptake rate in the deep Western Mediterranean was substantially higher than that of the intermediate levels in the global ocean.CTM2014‐54374‐R / BES‐2015‐074316Versión del editor3,17
Seasonal Niche Partitioning of Surface Temperate Open Ocean Prokaryotic Communities
Surface microbial communities are exposed to seasonally changing environmental conditions, resulting in recurring patterns of community composition. However, knowledge on temporal dynamics of open ocean microbial communities remains scarce. Seasonal patterns and associations of taxa and oligotypes from surface and chlorophyll maximum layers in the western Mediterranean Sea were studied over a 2-year period. Summer stratification versus winter mixing governed not only the prokaryotic community composition and diversity but also the temporal dynamics and co-occurrence association networks of oligotypes. Flavobacteriales, Rhodobacterales, SAR11, SAR86, and Synechococcales oligotypes exhibited contrasting seasonal dynamics, and consequently, specific microbial assemblages and potential inter-oligotype connections characterized the different seasons. In addition, oligotypes composition and dynamics differed between surface and deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM) prokaryotic communities, indicating depth-related environmental gradients as a major factor affecting association networks between closely related taxa. Taken together, the seasonal and depth specialization of oligotypes suggest temporal dynamics of community composition and metabolism, influencing ecosystem function and global biogeochemical cycles. Moreover, our results indicate highly specific associations between microbes, pointing to keystone ecotypes and fine-tuning of the microbes realized niche.En prens
Seasonal and interannual variability of dissolved oxygen around the Balearic Islands from hydrographic data
Oceanographic data obtained between 2001 and 2011 by the Spanish Institute of Oceanography (IEO, Spain) have been used to characterise the spatial
distribution and the temporal variability of the dissolvedoxygen around the
Balearic Islands (Mediterranean Sea). The study area includes most of the
Western Mediterranean Sea, from the Alboran Sea to Cape Creus,atthe
border between France and Spain. Dissolved Oxygen (DO) at thewatersurface is found to be in a state of equilibrium exchange with the atmosphere.
In the spring and summer a subsurface oxygen supersaturation is observed
due to the biological activity, above the subsurface fluorescence maximum.
Minimum observed values of dissolved oxygen are related to theLevantine
Intermediate Waters (LIW). An unusual minimum of dissolved oxygen concentrations were also recorded in the Alboran Sea Oxygen Minimum Zone.
The Western Mediterranean Deep Waters (WMDW) and the Western Intermediate Waters (WIW) show higher values of dissolved oxygenthanthe
Levantine Intermediate Waters due to their more recent formation. Using these dissolved oxygen concentrations it is possible to showthat the Western Intermediate Waters move southwards across the Ibiza Channel and the
deep water circulates around the Balearic Islands. It has also been possible
to characterise the seasonal evolution of the different watermassesandtheir
dissolved oxygen content in a station in the Algerian sub-basin.
Keywords: Ocean circulation, dissolved oxygen, water masses, Western
Mediterranean Sea, Balearic SeaPost-print
Larvae of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, 1896 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Portunidae) in the Balearic Archipelago (NW Mediterranean Sea)
The invasive blue crab Callinectes sapidus has been frequently recorded during the last years along the NW Mediterranean Sea, leading to established populations. Two megalopae of C. sapidus were found during two different oceanographic surveys in open waters of the Balearic Archipelago, in July 2005 and October 2011, previous to the first reference of adult specimens documented in the Balearic sub-basin. The analyzed environmental conditions of the sampling periods allowed us to hypothesize the likely introduction pathways, namely by maritime transport and surface currents. Furthermore, the recorded megalopae seem to enlarge the life history of C. sapidus in regard to its native area, where spawning peaks occur in late July and early August.Versión del editor
Decapod crustacean larval communities in the Balearic Sea (western Mediterranean): Seasonal composition, horizontal and vertical distribution patterns
Decapod crustaceans are the main target species of deepwater bottomtrawl fisheries in the Balearic Sea but little is
known about their larval stages. This work focuses on the species composition of the decapod larval community,
describing the main spatio-temporal assemblages and assessing their vertical distribution. Mesozooplankton
sampling was carried out using depth-stratified sampling devices at two stations located over the shelf break
and themid slope, in the north-western and southern Mallorca in late autumn 2009 and summer 2010. Differences
among decapod larvae communities, in terms of composition, adult's habitat such as pelagic or benthic, and distribution
patternswere observed between seasons, areas and station. Results showed that for both seasonsmost species
and developmental stages aggregatedwithin the upperwater column (above 75 mdepth) and showed higher
biodiversity in summer compared to late autumn. Most abundant species were pelagic prawns (e.g., Sergestidae)
occurring in both seasons and areas. The larval assemblages' distributions were different between seasonal hydrographic
scenarios and during situations of stratified and non-stratified water column. The vertical distribution
patterns of different larval developmental stages in respect to the adult's habitat were analyzed in relation to
environmental variables. Fluorescence had the highest explanatory power. Four clearly different vertical patterns
were identified: two corresponding to late autumn, which were common for all the main larval groups and other
two in summer, one corresponding to larvae of coastal benthic and the second to pelagic species larvae.Versión del editor2,655
2014-2021, 8 years without bottom-reaching deep water formation in the Western Mediterranean. Probably, the longest known period
Deep Water Formation (DWF) appeared almost regularly every year, during central winter months, in an area located offshore the Gulf of Lions in the NW Mediterranean Sea. Since the early 1960s, the processes involved in the DWF have been monitored, more or less intensively by regular hydrographic surveys or by moored instruments. It is worth noting the international efforts carried out in late 60s-early 70s by the so-called MEDOC Group to obtain a quite precise description of the whole process. Although the intensity of the DWF, as well as the amount of the newly formed Western Mediterranean Deep Water (WMDW), have shown high interanual variability, those years when the DWF was absent were exceptional, e.g. 1990, and those not reaching the bottom were scarce, e.g. 1997. Typically, they were years with almost no cold northerly winds during winter. By contrast, in some years the amount of newly formed WMDW was exceptional, e.g. 1987, and in some cases, an extra amount of this water came from dense shelf cascading, e.g. 1999. Moreover, in some years, the so-called variable Bottom Water, a slightly warm and salty layer, appeared near the bottom. It was a layer not thicker than 300 m, attributed to a large area affected by DWF which caused an extra amount of Levantine Intermediate Water (LIW) involved in the process, e.g. 1973. Other concomitant conditions that contributed to the DWF variability across the years was the presence of a blocking anticyclone in the Balearic Sea, that would play a role in intensifying the exposure of surface water to the northerlies, e.g. 1999. In winter 2005, all the factors contributing to an intense DWF process acted simultaneously, resulting in a new structure within the WMDW. The amount of newly formed WMDW, with higher density, T and S, was so extraordinary that affected the entire western Mediterranean basin, and it was identified as the Western Mediterranean Transition (WMT). The remnants of the WMDW previous to the WMT have been uplifted as to being available for a relevant contribution to the Mediterranean Outlfow Water (MOW) through the Gibraltar sill. After the WMT, the MOW showed both lower T and S than previously recorded up to around 2015, indicating that the old WMDW has been almost completely lost by leakage and diffusion. After the 2005 episode, the WMDW has evolved, changing its TS shape and increasing both T and S at the bottom, but still maintaining a deep layer with higher stratification than before 2005. In a previous work, we attributed the long period (2014-2018) without DWF to a combination of mild winters, the absence of the old WMDW, and the deep stratification. Such a process would be similar to the recovery of the Eastern Mediterranean Transient. In the present communication we incorporate 3 new years of data to the series, discuss the current situation and try to identify the requirements for a successful bottom-reaching DWF
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