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Laura Martín García, Brian Sorrell, Dorte Haubjerg Søgaard and Lars Chresten Lund-Hansen
The aims of this review are to elucidate the spatial variation in the primary production rates and biomasses (Chl a) of sea ice algae in the Canadian Arctic?Greenland region, characterized by its comparable physical settings. A database was compiled from...
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Elizaveta Agafonova, Ekaterina Novichkova, Alexander Novigatsky, Marina Kravchishina, Alexey Klyuvitkin and Anton Bulokhov
This paper presents the diatom and palynomorph data from a sediment trap deployed in the northern part of the East Barents Sea for an annual cycle from August 2017 to August 2018. The average monthly fluxes of diatoms and dinoflagellate cysts in the phot...
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Sergey A. Mosharov, Elena I. Druzhkova, Andrey F. Sazhin, Pavel V. Khlebopashev, Anastasia N. Drozdova, Nikolay A. Belyaev and Andrey I. Azovsky
Knowledge of the features of the structure and productivity of the Arctic communities of marine planktonic algae is necessary to identify possible changes in the pelagic ecosystem functioning under the changing climate condition of the Kara Sea. This stu...
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Else Nøst Hegseth and Cecilie von Quillfeldt
This work summarizes ice algal studies, presented as biomass and species temporal and spatial distribution, during 11 cruises conducted between 1986 and 2012. The majority of the biomass was found as loosely attached sub-ice algal layers, and sampling re...
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Eva Leu, Thomas A. Brown, Martin Graeve, Jozef Wiktor, Clara J. M. Hoppe, Melissa Chierici, Agneta Fransson, Sander Verbiest, Ane C. Kvernvik and Michael J. Greenacre
Assessing the relative importance of sea ice algal-based production is often vital for studies about climate change impacts on Arctic marine ecosystems. Several types of lipid biomarkers and stable isotope ratios are widely used for tracing sea ic-associ...
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Mark B. Edlund, James E. Almendinger, Xing Fang, Joy M. Ramstack Hobbs, David D. VanderMeulen, Rebecca L. Key, Daniel R. Engstrom
Pág. 1 - 35
Climate disrupts aquatic ecosystems directly through changes in temperature, wind, and precipitation, and indirectly through watershed effects. Climate-induced changes in northern lakes include longer ice-free season, stronger stratification, browning, s...
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