Institution
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Nonprofit•Castroville, California, United States•
About: Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in Castroville, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Upwelling & Population. The organization has 630 authors who have published 2068 publications receiving 119899 citations. The organization is also known as: Monterey Bay Aquarium and Research Institute & MBARI.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The results suggest that continued fishery closure and protection in no-take reserves are effective tools for allowing persistence of abalone populations, though there are no signs of recovery to levels comparable to those preceding fisheries collapse.
42 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, pore water sulfate gradient measurements were used as a proxy for the relative amounts of methane that exist in continental margin sediments associated with the Storegga Slide.
Abstract: [1] Marine slope failure involving methane-gas-hydrate-bearing sediments is one mechanism for releasing enormous quantities of methane to the ocean and atmosphere. The Storegga Slide, on the Norwegian margin, is the largest known Holocene-aged continental margin slope failure complex and is believed to have occurred in sediments that may have initially contained gas hydrate. Here, we report pore water sulfate gradient measurements that are used as a proxy for the relative amounts of methane that exist in continental margin sediments associated with the colossal Storegga Slide. These measurements suggest that a considerable inventory of methane occurs in sediments adjacent to, and unaffected by, the Storegga Slide events, but indicate that methane is notably absent from sediments on the sole of the slide and distal deposits created by the slide events. Either methane was lost during previous Pleistocene failure events or was never present in significant concentrations within the sediments that failed.
42 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that the taxonomic composition and structure of deep-sea wood fall communities varied considerably and equated with considerable differences in energy usage and availability, and suggest that natural variability in wood falls may contribute significantly toDeep-sea diversity.
Abstract: Wood falls on the deep-sea floor represent a significant source of energy into the food-limited deep sea. Unique communities of primarily wood- and sulfide-obligate species form on these wood falls. However, little is known regarding patterns and drivers of variation in the composition of wood fall communities through space and time, and thus, how wood falls contribute to deep-sea biodiversity. Eighteen Acacia logs varying in size were placed and retrieved after five years at a 3200 m site in the Pacific Ocean. We found that the taxonomic composition and structure of deep-sea wood fall communities varied considerably and equated with considerable differences in energy usage and availability. Our findings suggest that natural variability in wood falls may contribute significantly to deep-sea diversity.
42 citations
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TL;DR: A previously undescribed species of large semaeostome scyphomedusa, Tiburonia granrojo n.
Abstract: Submersible observations off Japan, Hawaii, and California, USA, at depths of 645–1497 m, have revealed a previously undescribed species of large semaeostome scyphomedusa. These observations were made from 1993 to 2002. The medusa, Tiburonia granrojo n. sp. is sufficiently different from other species in the family Ulmariidae to justify the creation of a new subfamily (Tiburoniinae). This subfamily and species are distinct in overall bell morphology and color, lacking any marginal tentacles, and having four to seven short, thick oral arms that extend beyond the bell margin. The entire medusa, including the mesoglea, is a deep red. A new key to the subfamilies of the Ulmaridae and large subunit rRNA sequence information for T. granrojo are provided. That new species of this size and mass are still being discovered in the deep waters of the world suggests that deep-water species remain undescribed.1
42 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the scientific purposes and experimental set-up of an international deployment of a 3 component broadband seismometer package on the ocean floor in Monterey Bay which took place during the summer of 1997.
Abstract: We describe the scientific purposes and experimental set-up of an international deployment of a 3 component broadband seismometer package on the ocean floor in Monterey Bay which took place during the summer of 1997. Highlights of this experiment were the installation, performed using a remotely operated vehicle (ROV), the underwater connection of the different components of the package, and the successful retrieval of 3 months of broadband seismic and auxiliary data. Examples of recordings of teleseisms and regional earthquakes are presented and the background noise characteristics are discussed, in comparison with those of near-by broadband land sites, current-meter data from the vicinity of the ocean bottom package, as well as pressure data from deeper ocean sites.
42 citations
Authors
Showing all 636 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Edward F. DeLong | 102 | 262 | 42794 |
Gaurav S. Sukhatme | 89 | 664 | 29569 |
Francisco P. Chavez | 85 | 287 | 29131 |
Barbara A. Block | 78 | 272 | 19039 |
David A. Caron | 73 | 273 | 16938 |
Kenneth S. Johnson | 71 | 208 | 19892 |
Jonathan P. Zehr | 70 | 250 | 18542 |
Robert C. Vrijenhoek | 67 | 200 | 25542 |
David A. Clague | 65 | 240 | 14041 |
Kenneth H. Coale | 60 | 116 | 17637 |
Peter G. Brewer | 60 | 209 | 13158 |
Michael J. Kelley | 59 | 339 | 27513 |
Raphael M. Kudela | 59 | 229 | 12094 |
Charles K. Paull | 56 | 208 | 11139 |
Steven J. Hallam | 54 | 178 | 12936 |