S
Sonia Brugel
Researcher at Umeå University
Publications - 8
Citations - 118
Sonia Brugel is an academic researcher from Umeå University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Food web. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 61 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Influence of allochthonous dissolved organic matter on pelagic basal production in a northerly estuary
Agneta Andersson,Sonia Brugel,Joanna Paczkowska,Owen Rowe,Owen Rowe,Daniela Figueroa,Susanne Kratzer,Catherine Legrand +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the role of allochthonous dissolved organic matte bacteria in aquatic food webs in estuaries receiving riverine water with a high content of coloured allochTHonous organic matte water.
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Importance of coastal primary production in the northern Baltic Sea
TL;DR: The main reason for this discrepancy is the lack of data regarding benthic primary production in the northern Baltic Sea, but also that past studies overestimated the importance of pelagic primary production by not correcting for system-specific bathymetric variation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Response of Coastal Phytoplankton to High Inflows of Terrestrial Matter
Joanna Paczkowska,Sonia Brugel,Owen Rowe,Owen Rowe,Robert Lefébure,Andreas Brutemark,Andreas Brutemark,Agneta Andersson +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, climate change scenarios project that precipitation will increase in northern Europe, causing amplified inflows of terrestrial matter (tM) and inorganic nutrients to coastal areas, and how this will affect coastal areas.
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Bromoanisoles and Methoxylated Bromodiphenyl Ethers in Macroalgae from Nordic Coastal Regions
Terry F. Bidleman,Agneta Andersson,Sonia Brugel,Lars Ericson,Peter Haglund,D. Kupryianchyk,Danny C. P. Lau,Per Liljelind,Lisa Lundin,Anders Tysklind,Mats Tysklind +10 more
TL;DR: Sixteen species of red, green and brown macroalgae were collected in 2017-2018 from coastal waters of the northern Baltic Sea, Sweden Atlantic and Norway Atlantic, and analyzed for bromoanisoles (BAs) and methoxylated bromodiphenyl ethers (MeO-BDEs).
Journal ArticleDOI
Allochthonous carbon is a major driver of the microbial food web – A mesocosm study simulating elevated terrestrial matter runoff
Cédric L. Meunier,Antonia Liess,Antonia Liess,Agneta Andersson,Sonia Brugel,Joanna Paczkowska,Habib Rahman,Bjorn Skoglund,Owen Rowe +8 more
TL;DR: Overall the results suggest that in shallow coastal waters, modified with allochthonous matter from river discharge, light attenuation may be inconsequential for the basal producer balance, whereas increased allochTHonous carbon, especially if readily bioavailable, favors bacteria over phytoplankton.