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Institution

Australian Antarctic Division

GovernmentHobart, Tasmania, Australia
About: Australian Antarctic Division is a government organization based out in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Sea ice & Population. The organization has 664 authors who have published 2176 publications receiving 84546 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Bedmap2 as discussed by the authors is a suite of gridded products describing surface elevation, ice-thickness and the seafloor and subglacial bed elevation of the Antarctic south of 60° S. In particular, the Bedmap2 ice thickness grid is made from 25 million measurements, over two orders of magnitude more than were used in Bedmap1.
Abstract: We present Bedmap2, a new suite of gridded products describing surface elevation, ice-thickness and the seafloor and subglacial bed elevation of the Antarctic south of 60° S. We derived these products using data from a variety of sources, including many substantial surveys completed since the original Bedmap compilation (Bedmap1) in 2001. In particular, the Bedmap2 ice thickness grid is made from 25 million measurements, over two orders of magnitude more than were used in Bedmap1. In most parts of Antarctica the subglacial landscape is visible in much greater detail than was previously available and the improved data-coverage has in many areas revealed the full scale of mountain ranges, valleys, basins and troughs, only fragments of which were previously indicated in local surveys. The derived statistics for Bedmap2 show that the volume of ice contained in the Antarctic ice sheet (27 million km3) and its potential contribution to sea-level rise (58 m) are similar to those of Bedmap1, but the mean thickness of the ice sheet is 4.6% greater, the mean depth of the bed beneath the grounded ice sheet is 72 m lower and the area of ice sheet grounded on bed below sea level is increased by 10%. The Bedmap2 compilation highlights several areas beneath the ice sheet where the bed elevation is substantially lower than the deepest bed indicated by Bedmap1. These products, along with grids of data coverage and uncertainty, provide new opportunities for detailed modelling of the past and future evolution of the Antarctic ice sheets.

1,678 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The power and pitfalls of NGS diet methods are reviewed, the critical factors to take into account when choosing or designing a suitable barcode are presented and the validation of data accuracy including the viability of producing quantitative data is discussed.
Abstract: The analysis of food webs and their dynamics facilitates understanding of the mechanistic processes behind community ecology and ecosystem functions. Having accurate techniques for determining dietary ranges and components is critical for this endeavour. While visual analyses and early molecular approaches are highly labour intensive and often lack resolution, recent DNA-based approaches potentially provide more accurate methods for dietary studies. A suite of approaches have been used based on the identification of consumed species by characterization of DNA present in gut or faecal samples. In one approach, a standardized DNA region (DNA barcode) is PCR amplified, amplicons are sequenced and then compared to a reference database for identification. Initially, this involved sequencing clones from PCR products, and studies were limited in scale because of the costs and effort required. The recent development of next generation sequencing (NGS) has made this approach much more powerful, by allowing the direct characterization of dozens of samples with several thousand sequences per PCR product, and has the potential to reveal many consumed species simultaneously (DNA metabarcoding). Continual improvement of NGS technologies, on-going decreases in costs and current massive expansion of reference databases make this approach promising. Here we review the power and pitfalls of NGS diet methods. We present the critical factors to take into account when choosing or designing a suitable barcode. Then, we consider both technical and analytical aspects of NGS diet studies. Finally, we discuss the validation of data accuracy including the viability of producing quantitative data.

958 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Moinuddin Ahmed1, Kevin J. Anchukaitis2, Kevin J. Anchukaitis3, Asfawossen Asrat4, H. P. Borgaonkar5, Martina Braida6, Brendan M. Buckley2, Ulf Büntgen7, Brian M. Chase8, Brian M. Chase9, Duncan A. Christie10, Duncan A. Christie11, Edward R. Cook2, Mark A. J. Curran12, Mark A. J. Curran13, Henry F. Diaz14, Jan Esper15, Ze-Xin Fan16, Narayan Prasad Gaire17, Quansheng Ge18, Joelle Gergis19, J. Fidel González-Rouco20, Hugues Goosse21, Stefan W. Grab22, Nicholas E. Graham23, Rochelle Graham23, Martin Grosjean24, Sami Hanhijärvi25, Darrell S. Kaufman26, Thorsten Kiefer, Katsuhiko Kimura27, Atte Korhola25, Paul J. Krusic28, Antonio Lara11, Antonio Lara10, Anne-Marie Lézine29, Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist28, Andrew Lorrey30, Jürg Luterbacher31, Valérie Masson-Delmotte29, Danny McCarroll32, Joseph R. McConnell33, Nicholas P. McKay26, Mariano S. Morales34, Andrew D. Moy12, Andrew D. Moy13, Robert Mulvaney35, Ignacio A. Mundo34, Takeshi Nakatsuka36, David J. Nash22, David J. Nash37, Raphael Neukom7, Sharon E. Nicholson38, Hans Oerter39, Jonathan G. Palmer40, Jonathan G. Palmer41, Steven J. Phipps40, María Prieto32, Andrés Rivera42, Masaki Sano36, Mirko Severi43, Timothy M. Shanahan44, Xuemei Shao18, Feng Shi, Michael Sigl33, Jason E. Smerdon2, Olga Solomina45, Eric J. Steig46, Barbara Stenni6, Meloth Thamban47, Valerie Trouet48, Chris S. M. Turney40, Mohammed Umer4, Tas van Ommen13, Tas van Ommen12, Dirk Verschuren49, A. E. Viau50, Ricardo Villalba34, Bo Møllesøe Vinther51, Lucien von Gunten, Sebastian Wagner, Eugene R. Wahl14, Heinz Wanner24, Johannes P. Werner31, James W. C. White52, Koh Yasue53, Eduardo Zorita 
Federal Urdu University1, Columbia University2, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution3, Addis Ababa University4, Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology5, University of Trieste6, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research7, University of Montpellier8, University of Bergen9, University of Chile10, Austral University of Chile11, Australian Antarctic Division12, University of Tasmania13, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration14, University of Mainz15, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden16, Nepal Academy of Science and Technology17, Chinese Academy of Sciences18, University of Melbourne19, Complutense University of Madrid20, Université catholique de Louvain21, University of the Witwatersrand22, Hydrologic Research Center23, University of Bern24, University of Helsinki25, Northern Arizona University26, Fukushima University27, Stockholm University28, Université Paris-Saclay29, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research30, University of Giessen31, Swansea University32, Desert Research Institute33, National Scientific and Technical Research Council34, British Antarctic Survey35, Nagoya University36, University of Brighton37, Florida State University38, Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research39, University of New South Wales40, University of Exeter41, Centro de Estudios Científicos42, University of Florence43, University of Texas at Austin44, Russian Academy of Sciences45, University of Washington46, National Centre for Antarctic and Ocean Research47, University of Arizona48, Ghent University49, University of Ottawa50, University of Copenhagen51, University of Colorado Boulder52, Shinshu University53
TL;DR: The authors reconstructed past temperatures for seven continental-scale regions during the past one to two millennia and found that the most coherent feature in nearly all of the regional temperature reconstructions is a long-term cooling trend, which ended late in the nineteenth century.
Abstract: Past global climate changes had strong regional expression To elucidate their spatio-temporal pattern, we reconstructed past temperatures for seven continental-scale regions during the past one to two millennia The most coherent feature in nearly all of the regional temperature reconstructions is a long-term cooling trend, which ended late in the nineteenth century At multi-decadal to centennial scales, temperature variability shows distinctly different regional patterns, with more similarity within each hemisphere than between them There were no globally synchronous multi-decadal warm or cold intervals that define a worldwide Medieval Warm Period or Little Ice Age, but all reconstructions show generally cold conditions between ad 1580 and 1880, punctuated in some regions by warm decades during the eighteenth century The transition to these colder conditions occurred earlier in the Arctic, Europe and Asia than in North America or the Southern Hemisphere regions Recent warming reversed the long-term cooling; during the period ad 1971–2000, the area-weighted average reconstructed temperature was higher than any other time in nearly 1,400 years

885 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on reducing propagule loads on humans, and their food, cargo, and transport vessels, in order to reduce the risk of alien introductions to Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic.
Abstract: Alien microbes, fungi, plants and animals occur on most of the sub-Antarctic islands and some parts of the Antarctic continent. These have arrived over approximately the last two centuries, coincident with human activity in the region. Introduction routes have varied, but are largely associated with movement of people and cargo in connection with industrial, national scientific program and tourist operations. The large majority of aliens are European in origin. They have both direct and indirect impacts on the functioning of species-poor Antarctic ecosystems, in particular including substantial loss of local biodiversity and changes to ecosystem processes. With rapid climate change occurring in some parts of Antarctica, elevated numbers of introductions and enhanced success of colonization by aliens are likely, with consequent increases in impacts on ecosystems. Mitigation measures that will substantially reduce the risk of introductions to Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic must focus on reducing propagule loads on humans, and their food, cargo, and transport vessels.

644 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The substantial effect of tour vessels on dolphin abundance in a region of low-level tourism calls into question the presumption that dolphin-watching tourism is benign.
Abstract: Studies evaluating effects of human activity on wildlife typically emphasize short-term behavioral responses from which it is difficult to infer biological significance or formulate plans to mitigate harmful impacts. Based on decades of detailed behavioral records, we evaluated long-term impacts of vessel activity on bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.) in Shark Bay, Australia. We compared dolphin abundance within adjacent 36- km 2 tourism and control sites, over three consecutive 4.5-year periods wherein research activity was relatively constant but tourism levels increased from zero, to one, to two dolphin-watching operators. A nonlinear logistic model demonstrated that there was no difference in dolphin abundance between periods with no tourism and periods in which one operator offered tours. As the number of tour operators increased to two, there was a significant average decline in dolphin abundance (14.9%; 95% CI =− 20.8 to −8.23), approximating a decline of one per seven individuals. Concurrently, within the control site, the average increase in dolphin abundance was not significant (8.5%; 95% CI =− 4.0 to +16.7). Given the substantially greater presence and proximity of tour vessels to dolphins relative to research vessels, tour-vessel activity contributed more to declining dolphin numbers within the tourism site than research vessels. Although this trend may not jeopardize the large, genetically diverse dolphin population of Shark Bay, the decline is unlikely to be sustainable for local dolphin tourism. A similar decline would be devastating for small, closed, resident, or endangered cetacean populations. The substantial effect of tour vessels on dolphin abundance in a region of low-level tourism calls into question the presumption that dolphin-watching tourism is benign.

603 citations


Authors

Showing all 677 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Wilson10275749388
David Murphy8154940441
Hanna Kokko7024518127
Mark A. Hindell6533714424
Steven D. Siciliano5721711978
Paul R. Haddad5656914643
Nicole S. Webster5317210871
Nick Gales481216729
Rosemary S.C. Horne472397218
Clive R. McMahon451776558
William Skinner452376509
John P. Y. Arnould442406816
Robert King442507497
Robert A. Massom431356600
Simon W. Wright439010242
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202321
202221
2021128
2020119
201998
2018102