Blar i Geophysical Institute på tidsskrift "Frontiers in Marine Science"
Viser treff 21-27 av 27
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A surface ocean CO2 reference network, SOCONET and associated marine boundary layer CO2 measurements
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019-07-12)The Surface Ocean CO2 NETwork (SOCONET) and atmospheric Marine Boundary Layer (MBL) CO2 measurements from ships and buoys focus on the operational aspects of measurements of CO2 in both the ocean surface and atmospheric ... -
Toward a Comprehensive and Integrated Strategy of the European Marine Research Infrastructures for Ocean Observations
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Research Infrastructures (RIs) are large-scale facilities encompassing instruments, resources, data and services used by the scientific community to conduct high-level research in their respective fields. The development ... -
The tropical Atlantic observing system
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019-05-10)The tropical Atlantic is home to multiple coupled climate variations covering a wide range of timescales and impacting societally relevant phenomena such as continental rainfall, Atlantic hurricane activity, oceanic ... -
Twenty-One Years of Phytoplankton Bloom Phenology in the Barents, Norwegian, and North Seas
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Phytoplankton blooms provide biomass to the marine trophic web, contribute to the carbon removal from the atmosphere and can be deadly when associated with harmful species. This points to the need to understand the phenology ... -
Two decades of match-mismatch in Northeast Arctic cod – Feeding conditions and survival
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2022)The successful recruitment of Northeast Arctic (NEA) cod is thought to depend on sufficient and suitable prey for the newly hatched larvae, in particular the nauplii stages of the lipid-rich calanoid copepod species Calanus ... -
The UN decade of ocean science for sustainable development
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019-07-31)Our civilization needs a clean, resilient, productive, safe, well-observed, documented and predicted ocean. “The ocean we need for the future we want” was the motto of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission proposal ... -
Wind Intensity Is Key to Phytoplankton Spring Bloom Under Climate Change
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019-08-30)The onset of the spring bloom (OSB) occurs when phytoplankton growth exceeds losses and is promoted by a transition from deep convection to a shallow mixing layer concurrent with increasing light intensities in nutrient-enriched ...