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Mitsuo Fukuchi

Researcher at National Institute of Polar Research

Publications -  132
Citations -  2871

Mitsuo Fukuchi is an academic researcher from National Institute of Polar Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sea ice & Phytoplankton. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 132 publications receiving 2609 citations. Previous affiliations of Mitsuo Fukuchi include Graduate University for Advanced Studies.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change and Southern Ocean ecosystems I: how changes in physical habitats directly affect marine biota

Andrew J. Constable, +65 more
TL;DR: Current and expected changes in ASO physical habitats in response to climate change are reviewed, including how these changes may impact the autecology of marine biota: microbes, zooplankton, salps, Antarctic krill, fish, cephalopods, marine mammals, seabirds, and benthos.
Journal ArticleDOI

Particulate organic carbon fluxes on the slope of the Mackenzie Shelf (Beaufort Sea): Physical and biological forcing of shelf-basin exchanges

TL;DR: In this paper, sediment traps and oceanographic sensors were moored from October 2003 to August 2004 over the 300- and 500-m isobaths on the slope of the Mackenzie Shelf (Beaufort Sea, Arctic Ocean).
Book ChapterDOI

Particulate Organic Carbon Flux to the Arctic Ocean Sea Floor

TL;DR: Fukuchi et al. as mentioned in this paper studied the dynamics of vertical flux of biogenic matter, and to a lesser extent also the composition of exported matter in a variety of marine ecosystems over the past two decades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the Southern Ocean Continuous Plankton Recorder survey

TL;DR: The Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) was first used in Antarctic waters during the 1925-1927 Discovery Expedition, and has been used successfully for 70 years to monitor plankton in the North Sea and North Atlantic Ocean as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoplankton communities in the Bering Sea and adjacent seas

TL;DR: The vertical distribution of phytoplankton in early warming season in the eastern Bering Sea and adjacent sea areas was investigated in this paper, where remarkably dense populations ofThalassiosira hyalina and T. nordenskioldii and relatively large populations ofFragilaria and Navicula occupied large part of the community.