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Marc Sourisseau

Researcher at IFREMER

Publications -  41
Citations -  656

Marc Sourisseau is an academic researcher from IFREMER. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Algal bloom. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 34 publications receiving 465 citations.

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Forecasting the risk of harmful algal blooms

TL;DR: This preface to the Asimuth Special Issue outlines the main HAB species of concern in the region and the strengths and limitations of different methodologies to provide early warning of their blooms.
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Climate Variability and Oceanographic Settings Associated with Interannual Variability in the Initiation of Dinophysis acuminata Blooms

TL;DR: Climate variability through physical-biological couplings, Sea Surface Temperature anomalies and time of initiation of the upwelling season and its intensity over several decades is examined to increase the capability to predict intense diarrhetic shellfish poisoning outbreaks in the early spring from observations in the preceding winter.
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Krill aggregation in the St. Lawrence system, and supply of krill to the whale feeding grounds in the estuary from the gulf

TL;DR: The results show spatial patterns of aggregation and advection controlled by the circulation and a high sensitivity to the parameters of the biological model, as well as changes in the seasonal circulation through gyre intensities, the seasonal thermocline and the strength of the estuarine circulation.
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A multi-decadal hindcast of a physical–biogeochemical model and derived oceanographic indices in the Bay of Biscay

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed a 37-year (1972-2008) hindcast run with a coupled physical-biogeochemical model in the Bay of Biscay.
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Advancing Observation of Ocean Biogeochemistry, Biology, and Ecosystems With Cost-Effective in situ Sensing Technologies

TL;DR: A review of existing sensor technologies that are already achieving cost-effectiveness compared with traditional instrumentation is provided in this paper, which can provide insight into methods for bridging observational gaps, identify key challenge areas where progress in cost reduction is lagging, and present a number of potentially transformative directions for future ocean biogeochemical and biological studies using cost-effective technologies and deployment strategies.