Institution
National Ocean Service
Government•Silver Spring, Maryland, United States•
About: National Ocean Service is a government organization based out in Silver Spring, Maryland, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Algal bloom & Population. The organization has 500 authors who have published 643 publications receiving 46096 citations.
Topics: Algal bloom, Population, Brevetoxin, Domoic acid, Karenia brevis
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The Assessment of Estuarine Trophic Status (ASSETS) screening model has been extended to allow its application to both estuarine and coastal systems, and two main areas where developments are needed are the definition of type-specific ranges for eutrophication parameters and the definition and quantification of measures which will result in an improved state through a change in pressures.
96 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used free-air gravity anomaly maps derived from the latest release of data acquired south of 30°S to confirm the existence of inactive spreading ridges within the Scotia Sea and surrounding small basins.
95 citations
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TL;DR: The results indicate that a positive feedback mechanism regulates brain aromatase and imply that the sexual dimorphic distribution of aromatases may be highly sensitive to physiologic cues and environmental perturbations in fish.
Abstract: In this study we identified sex-dependent dimorphism of brain aromatase in the teleost medaka and examined its regulation by sex steriods. We first investigated differential distribution of brain aromatase activity in sexually mature male and female medaka in serial coronal sections of the brain and identified the hypothalamic nuclei contained in each section using the brain atlas of medaka. In the brain of male medaka, high levels of activity are localized in sections containing the preoptic (POA) and suprachiasmatic nuclei (SC) (63-75 fmol/hr) and low levels in the nuclei periventricular dorsalis (HD), ventralis (HV), and caudalis (Hc), nuclei diffusus of lobulus inferiores (NDIL), and nuclei tuberi anteriores (TA) and posteriores (TP) (< 25 fmol/hr). In the brain of female medaka high aromatase activity is localized in sections containing the HD, HV, Hc, NDIL, TA, and TP (85-80 fmol/hr) and highly variable levels in the POA and SC (23-70 fmol/hr). The concentration and time dependency of the exposure of male medaka to estradiol on the total brain aromatase activity and morphologic sex characteristics were determined next. Estradiol increased the activity of brain aromatase in a concentration-dependent manner at 2.5 and 25 microg/L, but the increase was lower at higher concentrations of the hormone. The effect was time dependent, gradually increasing up to the fifth day of exposure, after which it reached a plateau. Estradiol induction of brain aromatase analyzed using Lineweaver-Burke plots of saturation assays revealed a non-first-order reaction. The results indicate that a positive feedback mechanism regulates brain aromatase and imply that the sexual dimorphic distribution of aromatase may be highly sensitive to physiologic cues and environmental perturbations in fish.
95 citations
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TL;DR: Phylogenetic relationships among chain-forming Cochlodinium species, including the harmful red tide forming dinoflagellate Cochlidinium polykrikoides, were investigated using specimens collected from coastal waters of Canada, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, MA©xico, Philippines, Puerto Rico, and USA.
95 citations
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TL;DR: The combined temperature, salinity and light requirements of Gambierdiscus can be used to define latitudinal ranges and species-specific habitats, as well as to inform predictive models.
94 citations
Authors
Showing all 501 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Charles H. Peterson | 77 | 202 | 28829 |
David T. Sandwell | 65 | 245 | 20058 |
William G. Sunda | 57 | 103 | 13933 |
Patricia A. Tester | 50 | 115 | 7012 |
James E. Byers | 49 | 137 | 9385 |
Jonathan A. Hare | 45 | 126 | 7259 |
Hunter S. Lenihan | 43 | 90 | 19833 |
Walter H. F. Smith | 42 | 111 | 30201 |
Richard P. Stumpf | 39 | 114 | 6034 |
Jonathan H. Grabowski | 39 | 120 | 5874 |
John S. Ramsdell | 39 | 115 | 4038 |
Patricia A. Fair | 38 | 115 | 3926 |
James C. Ryan | 37 | 101 | 5362 |
R. Wayne Litaker | 37 | 78 | 3947 |
Mark Busman | 36 | 84 | 4683 |