The application of long-lived bivalve sclerochronology in environmental baseline monitoring

J Steinhardt, PG Butler, ML Carroll… - Frontiers in Marine …, 2016 - frontiersin.org
Assessments of the impact of construction, operation, and removal of large infrastructures
and other human activities on the marine environment are limited because they do not fully …

New and emerging technologies in paleontology and paleobiology: A horizon scanning review

AA Abdelhady, B Seuss, S Jain… - Journal of African Earth …, 2024 - Elsevier
A systematic horizon scanning was undertaken to identify the up-to-date perspectives on
paleontological research. A summarized evaluation (applicability and acceptability) was …

Environmental factors regulating gaping activity of the bivalve Arctica islandica in Northern Norway

I Ballesta-Artero, R Witbaard, ML Carroll… - Marine Biology, 2017 - Springer
Arctica islandica is the longest-living non-colonial animal known at present. It inhabits
coastal waters in the North Atlantic and its annual shell increments are widely used for …

Marine bivalve shell geochemistry and ultrastructure from modern low pH environments: environmental effect versus experimental bias

S Hahn, R Rodolfo-Metalpa, E Griesshaber… - …, 2012 - bg.copernicus.org
Bivalve shells can provide excellent archives of past environmental change but have not
been used to interpret ocean acidification events. We investigated carbon, oxygen and trace …

Linking large‐scale climate variability with Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemistry in northern Norway

MJ Mette, AD Wanamaker Jr, ML Carroll… - Limnology and …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
The lack of high resolution, geographically diverse proxy records from the marine realm
limits our understanding of climate dynamics in the North Atlantic Ocean and Arctic during …

[HTML][HTML] Spatial Distribution and Growth Patterns of a Common Bivalve Mollusk (Macoma calcarea) in Svalbard Fjords in Relation to Environmental Factors

AE Noskovich, AG Dvoretsky - Animals, 2024 - mdpi.com
Ongoing warming in the Arctic has led to significant sea-ice loss and alterations in primary
production, affecting all components of the marine food web. The considerable spatial …

Deposit‐feeder diets in the Bering Sea: potential effects of climatic loss of sea ice‐related microalgal blooms

CA North, JR Lovvorn, JM Kolts… - Ecological …, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
Climate warming in seasonally ice‐covered seas is expected to reduce the extent and
duration of annual sea ice. Resulting changes in sea ice related blooms of ice algae or …

[HTML][HTML] Inter-annual dynamics of the Barents Sea red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) stock indices in relation to environmental factors

AG Dvoretsky, VG Dvoretsky - Polar Science, 2016 - Elsevier
Abstract Knowledge of relationships between environmental variables and biological
processes can greatly improve fisheries assessment and management in commercially …

[HTML][HTML] Effects of climate change on aquaculture site selection at a temperate estuarine system

H Pereira, A Picado, MC Sousa, AC Brito… - Science of The Total …, 2023 - Elsevier
Aquaculture is one of the food industries that most evolved in recent years in response to
increased human demand for seafood products, which has led to a progressive stock threat …

Shells of the bivalve Astarte moerchi give new evidence of a strong pelagic-benthic coupling shift occurring since the late 1970s in the North Water polynya

F Olivier, B Gaillard, J Thébault… - … of the Royal …, 2020 - royalsocietypublishing.org
Climate changes in the Arctic may weaken the currently tight pelagic-benthic coupling. In
response to decreasing sea ice cover, arctic marine systems are expected to shift from a 'sea …