نتایج جستجو برای: southern atlantic

تعداد نتایج: 156317  

2002

STOCK DEFINITION AND GEOGRAPHIC RANGE The harbor seal is found in all nearshore waters of the Atlantic Ocean and adjoining seas above about 30 degrees latitude (Katona et al. 1993). In the western North Atlantic, they are distributed from the eastern Canadian Arctic and Greenland south to southern New England and New York, and occasionally to the Carolinas (Boulva and McLaren 1979; Katona et al...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2005
Zofia A Kaliszewska Jon Seger Victoria J Rowntree Susan G Barco Rafael Benegas Peter B Best Moira W Brown Robert L Brownell Alejandro Carribero Robert Harcourt Amy R Knowlton Kim Marshall-Tilas Nathalie J Patenaude Mariana Rivarola Catherine M Schaeff Mariano Sironi Wendy A Smith Tadasu K Yamada

Right whales carry large populations of three 'whale lice' (Cyamus ovalis, Cyamus gracilis, Cyamus erraticus) that have no other hosts. We used sequence variation in the mitochondrial COI gene to ask (i) whether cyamid population structures might reveal associations among right whale individuals and subpopulations, (ii) whether the divergences of the three nominally conspecific cyamid species o...

2012
Karina van der Heijden Jillian M. Petersen Nicole Dubilier Christian Borowski

Transform faults are geological structures that interrupt the continuity of mid-ocean ridges and can act as dispersal barriers for hydrothermal vent organisms. In the equatorial Atlantic Ocean, it has been hypothesized that long transform faults impede gene flow between the northern and the southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) and disconnect a northern from a southern biogeographic province. To te...

2004
G. A. McKinley C. Rödenbeck M. Gloor S. Houweling M. Heimann

[1] We address an ongoing debate regarding the geographic distribution of interannual variability in ocean atmosphere carbon exchange. We find that, for 1983–1998, both novel high-resolution atmospheric inversion calculations and global ocean biogeochemical models place the primary source of global CO2 air-sea flux variability in the Pacific Ocean. In the model considered here, this variability...

2005
W. B. Curry D. W. Oppo

[1] Oxygen and carbon isotopic data were produced on the benthic foraminiferal taxa Cibicidoides and Planulina from 25 new piston cores, gravity cores, and multicores from the Brazil margin. The cores span water depths from about 400 to 3000 m and intersect the major water masses in this region. These new data fill a critical gap in the South Atlantic Ocean and provide the motivation for updati...

2014
Morgana Vighi Asunción Borrell Enrique A. Crespo Larissa R. Oliveira Paulo C. Simões-Lopes Paulo A. C. Flores Néstor A. García Alejandro Aguilar

From the early 17th century to the 1970s southern right whales, Eubalaena australis, were subject to intense exploitation along the Atlantic coast of South America. Catches along this coast recorded by whalers originally formed a continuum from Brazil to Tierra del Fuego. Nevertheless, the recovery of the population has apparently occurred fragmentarily, and with two main areas of concentration...

2014
D. Ehlert A. Levermann

The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) carries large amounts of heat into the North Atlantic influencing climate regionally as well as globally. Palaeo-records and simulations with comprehensive climate models suggest that the positive salt-advection feedback may yield a threshold behaviour of the system. That is to say that beyond a certain amount of freshwater flux into the No...

2008
Thomas L. Delworth Fanrong Zeng

[1] Previous work has suggested that the strength and latitudinal position of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) midlatitude westerly winds has an important impact on climate and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). We probe this hypothesis by conducting ensembles of experiments using the GFDL CM2.1 coupled ocean-atmosphere model with altered SH wind stress. We find, consistent wit...

2016
ANDREW F. THOMPSON ANDREW L. STEWART TOBIAS BISCHOFF

The ocean’s overturning circulation is inherently three-dimensional, yet modern quantitative estimates of the overturning typically represent the subsurface circulation as a two-dimensional, two-cell streamfunction that varies with latitude and depth only. This approach suppresses information about zonal mass and tracer transport. In this article, the authors extend earlier, zonally averaged ov...

2010
Anders Levermann Johannes Jakob Fürst

[1] Simulations with changed Southern Ocean wind‐stress, oceanic vertical mixing, surface freshwater forcing and global warming confirm the basic equations of Gnanadesikan’s (1999) theory for the Atlantic: one vertical scale, the pycnocline depth D, contributes inversely proportional to low‐latitudinal upwelling and linearly to Southern Ocean eddy transport. The maximum Atlantic overturning is ...

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