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Cooperative Research Centre

About: Cooperative Research Centre is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Sea ice. The organization has 7633 authors who have published 8607 publications receiving 429721 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work describes how this can be overcome by unifying functional traits with size spectra (which it is called functional size spectRA) and highlights the key knowledge gaps that need to be filled to model ecosystems from bacteria to whales.
Abstract: Size-based ecosystem modeling is emerging as a powerful way to assess ecosystem-level impacts of human- and environment-driven changes from individual-level processes. These models have evolved as mechanistic explanations for observed regular patterns of abundance across the marine size spectrum hypothesized to hold from bacteria to whales. Fifty years since the first size spectrum measurements, we ask how far have we come? Although recent modeling studies capture an impressive range of sizes, complexity, and real-world applications, ecosystem coverage is still only partial. We describe how this can be overcome by unifying functional traits with size spectra (which we call functional size spectra) and highlight the key knowledge gaps that need to be filled to model ecosystems from bacteria to whales.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 1999-Icarus
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate this regime for internally heated convection with temperature and pressure-dependent power-law viscosity (dislocation creep) and obtain scaling relationships for large aspect ratio convection.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a biogeochemical ocean general circulation model was used to investigate and quantify the role that the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), identified as the leading mode of climate variability, has in driving interannual variability in Southern Ocean air-sea CO2 fluxes between 1980 and 2000.
Abstract: A biogeochemical ocean general circulation model, driven with NCEP-R1 and observed atmospheric CO2 history, is used to investigate and quantify the role that the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), identified as the leading mode of climate variability, has in driving interannual variability in Southern Ocean air-sea CO2 fluxes between 1980 and 2000. Our simulations show the Southern Ocean to be a region of decreased CO2 uptake during the positive SAM phase. The SAM induces changes in Southern Ocean CO2 uptake with a 2-month time lag explaining 42% of the variance in the total interannual variability in air-sea CO2 fluxes. Our analysis shows that the response of the Southern Ocean to the SAM is primarily governed by changes in $\Delta$pCO2 (67%), and that this response is driven by changes in ocean physics that control the supply of nutrients to the upper ocean, primarily Dissolved Inorganic Carbon (DIC). The SAM is predicted to become stronger and more positive in response to climate change and our results suggest this will decrease the Southern Ocean CO2 uptake by 0.1 PgC/yr per unit change in the SAM.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Pathogen and fecal indicator concentrations were generally higher in domestic animal feces than in wildlife feces, and future studies to quantify potential pathogen risks in drinking-water watersheds should focus on quantifying pathogen loads from domestic animals and livestock rather than wildlife.
Abstract: A fecal analysis survey was undertaken to quantify animal inputs of pathogenic and indicator microorganisms in the temperate watersheds of Sydney, Australia. The feces from a range of domestic animals and wildlife were analyzed for the indicator bacteria fecal coliforms and Clostridium perfringens spores, the pathogenic protozoa Cryptosporidium and Giardia, and the enteric viruses adenovirus, enterovirus, and reovirus. Pathogen and fecal indicator concentrations were generally higher in domestic animal feces than in wildlife feces. Future studies to quantify potential pathogen risks in drinking-water watersheds should thus focus on quantifying pathogen loads from domestic animals and livestock rather than wildlife.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured vertical Fe profiles in the western Weddell Sea, Weddingell-Scotia Confluence, and Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), showing that Fe is derived from benthic Fe diffusion and sediment resuspension in areas characterized by high turbulence due to rugged bottom topography.
Abstract: In large parts of the Southern Ocean, primary production is limited due to shortage of iron (Fe). We measured vertical Fe profiles in the western Weddell Sea, Weddell-Scotia Confluence, and Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), showing that Fe is derived from benthic Fe diffusion and sediment resuspension in areas characterized by high turbulence due to rugged bottom topography. Our data together with literature data reveal an exponential decrease of dissolved Fe (DFe) concentrations with increasing distance from the continental shelves of the Antarctic Peninsula and the western Weddell Sea. This decrease can be observed 3500 km eastward of the Antarctic Peninsula area, downstream the ACC. We estimated DFe summer fluxes into the upper mixed layer of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean and found that horizontal advection dominates DFe supply, representing 54 ± 15% of the total flux, with significant vertical advection second most important at 29 ± 13%. Horizontal and vertical diffusion are weak with 1 ± 2% and 1 ± 1%, respectively. The atmospheric contribution is insignificant close to the Antarctic continent but increases to 15 ± 10% in the remotest waters (>1500 km offshore) of the ACC. Translating Southern Ocean carbon fixation by primary producers into biogenic Fe fixation shows a twofold excess of new DFe input close to the Antarctic continent and a one-third shortage in the open ocean. Fe recycling, with an estimated “fe” ratio of 0.59, is the likely pathway to balance new DFe supply and Fe fixation.

149 citations


Authors

Showing all 7633 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eric N. Olson206814144586
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Grant W. Montgomery157926108118
Paul Mitchell146137895659
James Whelan12878689180
Shaobin Wang12687252463
Graham D. Farquhar12436875181
Jie Jin Wang12071954587
Christos Pantelis12072356374
John J. McGrath120791124804
David B. Lindenmayer11995459129
Ashley I. Bush11656057009
Yong-Guan Zhu11568446973
Ary A. Hoffmann11390755354
David A. Hume11357359932
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202211
2021243
2020284
2019300
2018327
2017419