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Journal Highlights November 2009 |
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Wednesday, 11 November 2009 |
Ocean mixing and food supply
Strong mixing in cold nutrient-rich waters along the eastern
boundaries of the world's oceans appears to reduce rather than
stimulate growth of phytoplankton (microscopic plant-like organisms).
In the nutrient-poor open ocean, on the other hand, mixing has a
positive effect on phytoplankton growth. This is the surprising
conclusion of a recent article by French oceanographer Vincent Rossi
and colleagues in EGU's open access journal Nonlinear Processes in
Geophysics (NPG). Since phytoplankton are the base of the ocean food
chain (they are eaten by zooplankton, which are then eaten by small
fish) this finding provides new understanding of some of the most
important regions for human food production.
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Influence of atmospheric CO2 on vegetation: evidence from past climates
Changing levels of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide have a direct influence on vegetation. Plants depend on CO2 for growth and development. Thus, when the atmosphere contains low levels of CO2,
as during ice ages, forests are reduced. Taking this effect into
account makes climate models more reliable. This is the conclusion of a
recent article in EGU's open access journal Climate of the Past by
Colin Prentice and Sandy Harrison of the University of Bristol, UK.
Read more>>
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