scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

The Cyprus Institute

OtherNicosia, Cyprus
About: The Cyprus Institute is a other organization based out in Nicosia, Cyprus. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Aerosol & Environmental science. The organization has 418 authors who have published 1252 publications receiving 32586 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that temperature anomalies are associated with the mortality event of Cladocora caespitosa corals at the southeastern coast of Cyprus during a prolonged period of higher than average sea temperature anomalies.
Abstract: A mortality event of Cladocora caespitosa corals and the extent of bleaching, necrosis and pigmented areas in the colonies were studied at the southeastern coast of Cyprus during a prolonged period of higher than average sea temperature anomalies (summer/autumn 2012). With the use of scuba diving and image analysis software, we monitored the extent of mortality of 29 colonies of C. caespitosa by measuring and comparing the area percentage of healthy tissue, affected tissue (bleached, necrotic) and older mortality events (encrusted skeleton). In September 2012, on average, 24 % of the colonies surface area was affected (bleaching and/or necrosis). In October 2012, C. caespitosa showed on average 26.3 % of the colony surface area affected, evidence of continuing deterioration. At the same time, 10 % (3 of 29) of the colonies showed an increase in the pigmentation of previously bleached polyps in small and marginal areas (6–8 %). Irrespective of the amount, the regaining of pigments recorded is considered an important find. Corals and marine organisms in general in the Levantine Sea are affected greatly by warming events, to the extent where a very small percentage of polyps/colonies show resilience under thermal stress. Natural bleaching of C. caespitosa, even though limited to a few colonies and very small portions of tissue/polyps, was documented for the first time in the Levantine Sea. We conclude that temperature anomalies are associated with the mortality event. Whether prolonged higher temperature is the direct cause, or whether it acts synergistically with other factors should be the subject of further investigations.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated three meteorological models (MM5, WRF and TRAMPER) by comparing the calculated meteorological parameters with observations over the Po Valley area (Italy) for 2005, and found that MM5 and WRF perform with similar quality, with advantages of WRF at following high resolution time patterns and better scores of MM5 at reproducing annual averages, noticed for precipitation and relative humidity calculations.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, atmospheric concentrations of the hydroxyl radical (OH) and the hydroperoxyl radical(HO2) were measured during an intensive field campaign (CYprus PHotochemistry EXperiment, CYPHEX-2014) in the northwest of Cyprus in the summer of 2014 very low local anthropogenic and biogenic emissions around the measurement location provided a vantage point to study the contrasts in atmospheric oxidation pathways under highly processed marine air masses and those influenced by relatively fresh emissions from mainland Europe.
Abstract: The Mediterranean is a climatically sensitive region located at the crossroads of air masses from three continents: Europe, Africa, and Asia The chemical processing of air masses over this region has implications not only for the air quality but also for the long-range transport of air pollution To obtain a comprehensive understanding of oxidation processes over the Mediterranean, atmospheric concentrations of the hydroxyl radical (OH) and the hydroperoxyl radical (HO2) were measured during an intensive field campaign (CYprus PHotochemistry EXperiment, CYPHEX-2014) in the northwest of Cyprus in the summer of 2014 Very low local anthropogenic and biogenic emissions around the measurement location provided a vantage point to study the contrasts in atmospheric oxidation pathways under highly processed marine air masses and those influenced by relatively fresh emissions from mainland Europe The CYPHEX measurements were used to evaluate OH and HO2 simulations using a photochemical box model (CAABA/MECCA) constrained with CYPHEX observations of O3, CO, NOx, hydrocarbons, peroxides, and other major HOx (OH + HO2) sources and sinks in a low-NOx environment (

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study reviews and verifies the implementations of these two factors in six tools used for optical modelling in solar energy research: Tonatiuh, SolTrace, Tracer, Solstice, Heliosim and SolarPILOT.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, spectral measurements from a ground-based multi-azimuth Multi-AXis Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (MAX-DOAS) system were successfully retrieved for the first time in Athens, by using spectral measurements.

33 citations


Authors

Showing all 459 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Philippe Ciais149965114503
Jonathan Williams10261341486
Jos Lelieveld10057037657
Andrew N. Nicolaides9057230861
Efstathios Stiliaris8834025487
Leonard A. Barrie7417717356
Nikos Mihalopoulos6928015261
Karl Jansen5749811874
Jean Sciare561299374
Euripides G. Stephanou5412814235
Lefkos T. Middleton5418415683
Elena Xoplaki5312912097
Theodoros Christoudias501977765
Dimitris Drikakis492867136
George K. Christophides4812711099
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
ETH Zurich
122.4K papers, 5.1M citations

80% related

University of Bern
79.4K papers, 3.1M citations

79% related

University of Maryland, College Park
155.9K papers, 7.2M citations

78% related

University of Colorado Boulder
115.1K papers, 5.3M citations

78% related

National Research Council
76K papers, 2.4M citations

77% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202366
202274
2021200
2020157
2019136
2018111