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      Food webs and carbon flux in the Barents Sea

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          Geomorphic/Tectonic Control of Sediment Discharge to the Ocean: The Importance of Small Mountainous Rivers

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            Role of sinking in diatom life-history cycles: ecological, evolutionary and geological significance

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              A major ecosystem shift in the northern Bering Sea.

              Until recently, northern Bering Sea ecosystems were characterized by extensive seasonal sea ice cover, high water column and sediment carbon production, and tight pelagic-benthic coupling of organic production. Here, we show that these ecosystems are shifting away from these characteristics. Changes in biological communities are contemporaneous with shifts in regional atmospheric and hydrographic forcing. In the past decade, geographic displacement of marine mammal population distributions has coincided with a reduction of benthic prey populations, an increase in pelagic fish, a reduction in sea ice, and an increase in air and ocean temperatures. These changes now observed on the shallow shelf of the northern Bering Sea should be expected to affect a much broader portion of the Pacific-influenced sector of the Arctic Ocean.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Progress in Oceanography
                Progress in Oceanography
                Elsevier BV
                00796611
                October 2006
                October 2006
                : 71
                : 2-4
                : 232-287
                Article
                10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.003
                a70f78ec-5a28-479b-9f5e-63ec749d6c04
                © 2006

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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