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A practical handbook of seawater analysis

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The article was published on 1968-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 11288 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Seawater.

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Seasonal and Interannual Variation in the Hydrography of the Cariaco Basin: Implications for Basin Ventilation

TL;DR: The hydrography of the Cariaco Basin (temperature, salinity, density, dissolved oxygen concentration) was studied using monthly observations collected between November 1995 and August 1998 at the CArbon Retention In A Colored Ocean (CARIACO) time series station (10.51N, 64.661W) as mentioned in this paper.
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Effects of silicate limitation on production of domoic acid, a neurotoxin, by the diatom Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries. II. Continuous culture studies

TL;DR: Results suggest that luxury uptake of Si by P. multisenes may happen only in phys~ologically active populations, i .e , the exponential phase, but not in the stationary phase.
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Diel variations in the photosynthetic parameters of coastal marine phytoplankton

TL;DR: Correlations with environmental covariates support the hypothesis that the photosynthetic rhythms observed in the field result both from intrinsic oscillations within the phytoplankton cells and from varying environmental factors.
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Microbial nitrogen transformations in unconsolidated coral reef sediments

TL;DR: Major nitrogen (N) pools and bacterial transformations of N were examined in carbonate sediments of 3 reefs in the central area of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, andhibitor experiments indicated that much of the NH,' uthzation might be by nitrification.
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The microflagellate-picoplankton food linkage in the water column of Lake Biwa

TL;DR: Seasonal variations of abundance and biomass of heterotrophic microflagellates (HMF), bacteria, and unicellular chroococcoid cyanobacteria at a pelagic site in the north basin of Lake Biwa were measured and it was indicated that bacterial net production rates were usually almost equal to rates of consumption of bacteria by HMF populations.