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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 these estuarine habitats prone to high nutrient input, N₂-fixation is minimal and denitrification rather than Anx serves as an important mechanism for counteracting N loading.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The methods that were developed for the cryopreservation of Spz samples pooled from several fish were found to be suitable for preserving samples of selected individual fish and led to the formation of an operating ‘sperm bank’ for C. carpio L. in Israel.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2000-Allergy
TL;DR: The acute effects of lycopene (LYC‐O‐MATOTM) on airway hyperreactivity were assessed in patients with exercise‐induced asthma (EIA) in order to assess the beneficial effect of antioxidants on asthma.
Abstract: Background: Lycopene has previously been shown to have high antioxidative activity. In view of the controversy regarding the beneficial effect of antioxidants on asthma, the acute effects of lycopene (LYC-O-MATOTM) on airway hyperreactivity were assessed in patients with exercise-induced asthma (EIA). Methods: Twenty patients with EIA participated in our study to verify the antioxidative effects. The test was based on the following sequence: measurement of baseline pulmonary function, 7-min exercise session on a motorized treadmill, 8-min rest and again measurement of pulmonary function, 1-week, oral, randomly administered, double-blind supplementation of placebo or 30 mg/day of lycopene (LYC-O-MATO), measurement of pulmonary function at rest, 7-min exercise session, and 8-min rest and again measurement of pulmonary function. A 4-week washout interval was allowed between each protocol. Results: All patients given placebo showed significant postexercise reduction of more than 15% in their forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1). After receiving a daily dose of 30 mg of lycopene for 1 week, 11 (55%) patients were significantly protected against EIA. Serum analyses of the patients by high-pressure liquid chromatography detected in the lycopene-supplemented patients an elevated level of lycopene compared to the placebo group, with no change in retinol, tocopherols, or in the other carotenoids. Conclusions: Our results indicate that a daily dose of lycopene exerts a protective effect against EIA in some patients, most probably through an in vivo antioxidative effect.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed tectonic map of the Wharton Basin based on reinterpretation of satellite-derived gravity anomalies and marine magnetic anomalies was built, which is used to constrain the thickness, buoyancy, and rheology of the subducting plate.
Abstract: Understanding the subduction processes along the Sunda Trench requires detailed constraints on the subducting lithosphere. We build a detailed tectonic map of the Wharton Basin based on reinterpretation of satellite-derived gravity anomalies and marine magnetic anomalies. The Wharton Basin is characterized by a fossil ridge, dated ~36.5 Ma, offset by N-S fracture zones. Magnetic anomalies 18 to 34 (38–84 Ma) are identified on both flanks, although a large part of the basin has been subducted. We analyze the past plate kinematic evolution of the Wharton Basin by two-plate (India-Australia) and three-plate (India-Australia-Antarctica) reconstructions. Despite the diffuse plate boundaries within the Indo-Australian plate for the last 20 Ma, we obtain finite rotation parameters that we apply to reconstruct the subducted Wharton Basin and constrain the thickness, buoyancy, and rheology of the subducting plate. The lower subductability of younger lithosphere off Sumatra has important consequences on the morphology, with a shallower trench, forearc islands, and a significant inward deviation of the subduction system. This deviation decreases in the youngest area, where the Wharton fossil spreading center enters subduction: The discontinuous magmatic crust and serpentinized upper mantle, consequences of the slow spreading rates at which this area was formed, weaken the mechanical resistance to subduction and facilitate the restoration of the accretionary prism. Deeper effects include the possible creation of asthenospheric windows beneath the Andaman Sea, in relation to the long-offset fracture zones, and east of 105°E, as a result of subduction of the spreading center.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The total HC concentrations, n-alkane composition, CPI, UCM and other evaluation indices suggest the dominance of terrestrial hydrocarbons in the estuarine while petroleum derived hydrocarols in the harbour sediments.

88 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