71 research outputs found

    Benthic response to ammonium pulses in a tropical lagoon : implications for coastal environmental processes

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    In New Caledonia, the benthic communities living in the coral reef lagoon around Noumea city are subjected to regular shifts from oligotrophic conditions typical of lagoon waters to nutrient enrichment due to waste water inputs. The influence of ammonium pulses on microphytobenthos production was experimentally tested under varying light intensities in the vicinity of Noumea. Benthic oxygen, ammonium and silicon fluxes at the sediment-water interface were measured in situ using benthic enclosures. Three ammonium concentrations were tested. Gross primary production was doubled with a 13.8 mu mol 1(-1) ammonium concentration increase. Fitted PI curves showed that maximum production (F-max) was linearly related to ammonium concentration, but not the optimal irradiance (I-k). Silicon fluxes were characterized by dissolution in the absence of light, a process that declined with increasing illumination. These results were attributed to microphytobenthos activity, mainly diatoms that are nutrient-limited and strongly reactive to ammonium inputs. Production may result from a multiplication of cells, but migration up to the water sediment interface may also be involved. Oxygen consumption was also significantly influenced by ammonium concentration as a positive linear relationship with added ammonium concentration was established. Even during short-term experiments, ammonium enrichment stimulated photoautotrophic production, increasing the energy available to heterotrophs. Furthermore, microbenthic activities as well as nitrate production were increased by ammoniaoxidizing bacteria able to grow chemolithotrophically at the expense of oxygen. Therefore, in the study area, pulses of urban waste waters resulted in a decrease of plant-related autotrophy in benthic communities. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Origine, transport et devenir des apports naturels et anthropiques dans le lagon sud-ouest de Nouvelle-Calédonie

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    L’ird (Institut de recherche pour le développement) conduit depuis dix ans un programme pluridisciplinaire sur les effets des apports naturels et anthropiques sur le fonctionnement du lagon de Nouvelle-Calédonie. Celle-ci connaît actuellement une croissance de sa population et un développement de son industrie minière. Trois grands types d’apports sont pris en compte : les particules entraînées par l’érosion des sols et des sous-sols et dont l'accumulation brutale peut être responsable du dépôt de quantités considérables de sédiments, les métaux potentiellement toxiques pour les organismes vivant dans le lagon et les éléments nutritifs susceptibles de conduire les eaux jusqu'à l’eutrophisation (confinement chimique conduisant à l'élimination de nombreuses espèces vivantes et à la dominance d'un petit nombre d'autres). Le présent article offre trois exemples de problématiques environnementales qui n'ont pu être résolues qu’au moyen de la fédération de différentes approches de recherche complémentaires : l’influence des courants sur la dispersion des particules détritiques en provenance de l'île, le devenir des métaux dans le lagon et leur accumulation dans les organismes, les effets des apports en nutriments sur les communautés planctoniques et les risques d'eutrophisation. Les résultats de ces recherches sont présentés tout en conservant à l’esprit les objectifs nécessairement appliqués d’un programme de recherche pour le développement. Il s’agit principalement de définir les bases scientifiques permettant d’identifier certains outils de diagnostic environnemental et de développer des approches de simulation mathématique susceptibles d'offrir une vision synthétique et prévisionnelle de l’état et du devenir des environnements lagonaires sous influence anthropique.For the past ten years, the ird (Institut de recherche pour le développement) has developed a multidisciplinary programme dealing with the effects of natural and anthropogenic terrigenous inputs on the New Caledonia coral reef lagoon which is currently subjected to environmental pressure due to population increase and development of the mining industry. The ongoing study focused on three main categories of inputs: (i) particles generated by erosion processes and responsible for excessive sediment inputs in the lagoon, (ii) metals exhibiting a potentially lethal effect on the lagoon biota, (iii) nutrients responsible for eutrophication. This article presents three examples of environmental issues that could be addressed through complementary research approaches: (i) the dispersion of terrigenous inputs as commended by currents, (ii) the fate of metals in the lagoon and their accumulation in the biota, (iii) the effects of nutrient enrichment on pelagic communities. Results are presented while keeping in mind the necessary applied outcomes requested from a research programme devoted to development issues. Such outcomes are mainly related to the identification of suited environmental diagnostic tools and to the development of modelling approaches yielding synthetic and predictive information on the status and fate of coral reef lagoons subject to anthropogenic stress

    Delivery of crop pollination services is an insufficient argument for wild pollinator conservation

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    There is compelling evidence that more diverse ecosystems deliver greater benefits to people, and these ecosystem services have become a key argument for biodiversity conservation. However, it is unclear how much biodiversity is needed to deliver ecosystem services in a cost-effective way. Here we show that, while the contribution of wild bees to crop production is significant, service delivery is restricted to a limited subset of all known bee species. Across crops, years and biogeographical regions, crop-visiting wild bee communities are dominated by a small number of common species, and threatened species are rarely observed on crops. Dominant crop pollinators persist under agricultural expansion and many are easily enhanced by simple conservation measures, suggesting that cost-effective management strategies to promote crop pollination should target a different set of species than management strategies to promote threatened bees. Conserving the biological diversity of bees therefore requires more than just ecosystem-service-based arguments

    One-dimensional model of short-term dynamics of the pelagic ecosystem in the NW Mediterranean Sea: effects of wind events

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    A one-dimensional coupled physical-biological model of the mixed layer was applied to the pluridisciplinary data set acquired at short-time scales at a fixed station during the DYNAPROC cruise (May 1995) in the open NW Mediterranean. This cruise provided the opportunity to observe upper layer mixing, pycnocline deepening and vertical advection resulting from several wind events. The physical model is an eddy-kinetic-energy model; parameterisation of Ekman pumping and relaxation to the temperature data were introduced to reproduce the vertical advection observed during the major wind event. Eight variables were included in the ecosystem model: three classes of phytoplankton (diatoms, nanoflagellates and picoplankton), two nutrients (nitrate and ammonium), one herbivorous zooplankton and two types of detritus. Simulation over a 1-month period, performed with real meteorological data recorded during the cruise, reasonably reproduced the effects of the wind events, i.e. mixing and Ekman pumping which induced a 10-m vertical advection of the pycnocline. The observed nitrate and ammonium concentrations and the phytoplankton decrease were reproduced by the model. The transition from a mesotrophic ecosystem, characteristic of the spring bloom period, to an oligotrophic system was successfully simulated. For example, the nanoflagellate, and diatom contributions decreased during the month while that of the picoplankton doubled; the decline in herbivorous zooplankton was also reproduced. The simulated results showed that the decrease in diatoms and nanoflagellates resulted from both grazing pressure and significant cloud cover at the end of the month. Vertical advection also plays a nonnegligible role on the simulated temporal changes of the three phytoplankton classes. In fact, it displaces the subsurface peak nearer the surface, and thus allows the phytoplankton to slightly develop a few days after the major wind event, even if diatoms and nanoflagellates decrease overall. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

    Impacts of climate on marine top predators

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    In spite of its pivotal role in future implementations of the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries Management, current knowledge about tuna habitat preferences remains fragmented and heterogeneous, because it relies mainly on regional or local studies that have used a variety of approaches making them difficult to combine. Therefore in this study we analyse data from six tuna species in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans in order to provide a global, comparative perspective of habitat preferences. These data are longline catch per unit effort from 1958 to 2007 for albacore, Atlantic bluefin, southern bluefin, bigeye, yellowfin and skipjack tunas. Both quotient analysis and Generalised Additive Models were used to determine habitat preference with respect to eight biotic and abiotic variables. Results confirmed that, compared to temperate tunas, tropical tunas prefer warm, anoxic, stratified waters. Atlantic and southern bluefin tuna prefer higher concentrations of chlorophyll than the rest. The two species also tolerate most extreme sea surface height anomalies and highest mixed layer depths. In general, Atlantic bluefin tuna tolerates the widest range of environmental conditions. An assessment of the most important variables determining fish habitat is also provided

    A framework for understanding the performance of national governing bodies of sport

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    Although much research exists on the performance of organizations little literature exists that allows understanding of the performance of national governing bodies (NGBs) of sport. The research in this paper aims to facilitate this understanding and presents the results of a programme of research carried out with French NGBs. In the main phase of the research, utilizing an adaptation of Lawrence and Lorsch's theoretical framework, case study research was carried out with 11 French NGBs in order to understand their strategy and management practices in relation to their organizational performance. Analysis of these case studies, alongside previous research that has focused on the relationship between strategy/organizational structure and performance, leads to the proposal of a framework through which to explain NGB performance in the field of sport. This framework seeks to accommodate the relationship between strategy, management and operational performance
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