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Institution

National Institute of Oceanography, India

FacilityPanjim, Goa, India
About: National Institute of Oceanography, India is a facility organization based out in Panjim, Goa, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monsoon & Population. The organization has 4713 authors who have published 6927 publications receiving 174272 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used ocean circulation models, together with satellite altimeter data, to study the pathways by which equatorial signals pass through the Andaman Sea to the Bay of Bengal and associated dynamical interactions in the process.
Abstract: Circulation in the Bay of Bengal (BoB) is driven not only by local winds, but are also strongly forced by the reflection of equatorial Kelvin waves (EKWs) from the eastern boundary of the Indian Ocean. The equatorial influence attains its peak during the monsoon-transition period when strong eastward currents force the strong EKWs along the equator. The Andaman Sea, lying between the Andaman and Nicobar island chains to its west and Indonesia, Thailand, and Myanmar to the south, east, and north, is connected to the equatorial ocean and the BoB by three primary passages, the southern (6°N), middle (10°N), and northern (15°N) channels. We use ocean circulation models, together with satellite altimeter data, to study the pathways by which equatorial signals pass through the Andaman Sea to the BoB and associated dynamical interactions in the process. The mean coastal circulation within the Andaman Sea and around the islands is primarily driven by equatorial forcing, with the local winds forcing a weak sea-level signal. On the other hand, the current forced by local winds is comparable to that forced remotely from the equator. Our results suggest that the Andaman and Nicobar Islands not only influence the circulation within the Andaman Sea, but also significantly alter the circulation in the interior bay and along the east coast of India, implying that they need to be represented accurately in numerical models of the Indian Ocean.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that a combination treatment of fibrate plus 9-cis beta-carotene-rich Dunaliella powder amplifies the effect of the drug on HDL-cholesterol levels.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis suggested earlier that myostatins in fish have retained a different partition of the expression patterns and functions which characterized the ancestral gene before the duplication event that gave rise to growth differentiation factor-11 (GDF-11) and GDF-8 (myostatin) is supported.
Abstract: In this study, the distribution of myostatin was investigated during larval and postlarval developmental stages of Sparus aurata (sea bream), Solea solea (sole) and Brachydanio rerio (zebrafish) by immunohistochemistry using antisera raised against a synthetic peptide located within the precursor region of sea bream myostatin. All the three species examined showed the strongest immunoreactivity in red skeletal muscle in juveniles and adults. During larval development of sea bream, strong staining was detected in skin and brain. Immunoreactivity was also found in muscle, pharynx, gills, pancreas and liver. From metamorphosis, immunoreactivity was identifiable in the oesophagus, in the apical portion of the stomach epithelium, in the intestinal epithelium and in renal tubules. In larval zebrafish at hatching, the most intense myostatin immunoreactivity was evident in the skin epithelium. Immunoreactivity was also found in the retina and brain. In the adult, an intense immunostaining occurred in the gastrointestinal tract as well as in the ovary. In sole larvae, immunoreactivity was found in liver and intestine. Our results support the hypothesis suggested earlier that myostatins in fish have retained a different partition (compared with mammals) of the expression patterns and functions which characterized the ancestral gene before the duplication event that gave rise to growth differentiation factor-11 (GDF-11) and GDF-8 (myostatin).

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a method of observing and measuring the swimbladder resonance of a captive live fish in controlled conditions is described, and results on several gadoids are given; the observed resonant frequencies being higher than predicted are given, the damping of resonance is high, which is expected.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The chemical nature and production of antibacterial compounds produced by sponge or its associated bacteria appears to be governed by the environment, and an inverse relationship was observed between the epibacterial abundance over the sponge surface in nature and the antibacterial activity displayed by the sponge extracts in laboratory bioassays.
Abstract: Variations in the antibacterial activity of the sponge Ircinia ramosa were evaluated during two collection periods (January and May) against vicinity fouling bacteria (VFB) and sponge surface-associated bacteria (SAB). The density of fouling bacteria in the water column, as well as epibacterial abundance on the sponge surface, was enumerated during both collections, and both increased in the warmer month of May. The extracts obtained from SAB were also tested for their role in antibacterial activity of the host. Sponge-associated bacteria are capable of producing antibacterial metabolites. The antibacterial activity that originated from polar fractions in the cooler month of January shifted towards the nonpolar fractions in May. Nonpolar fractions were more useful for the sponge when threatened with increased bacterial density. Thus, the chemical nature and production of antibacterial compounds produced by sponge or its associated bacteria appears to be governed by the environment. An inverse relationship was observed between the epibacterial abundance over the sponge surface in nature and the antibacterial activity displayed by the sponge extracts in laboratory bioassays. This investigation reveals the importance of collection period as well as the role of associated bacteria in the evaluation of antibacterial activity.

74 citations


Authors

Showing all 4731 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Amit Kumar65161819277
Muhammad Tahir65163623892
Shubha Sathyendranath6424618141
Anjan Chatterjee6127611675
Stephen E. Calvert6010812044
Michael D. Krom5913710846
Victor Smetacek5913519279
Nicola Casagli5839111786
Michael S. Longuet-Higgins5613215846
Baruch Rinkevich542498819
Jérôme Vialard521609094
Matthieu Lengaigne5114711510
José M. Carcione503469421
Antonio M. Pascoal493718905
Assaf Sukenik491257166
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202260
2021664
2020542
2019365
2018348