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1.
J Geophys Res Oceans ; 124(1): 403-431, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31007997

ABSTRACT

Biogeochemical Argo floats, profiling to 2,000-m depth, are being deployed throughout the Southern Ocean by the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling program (SOCCOM). The goal is 200 floats by 2020, to provide the first full set of annual cycles of carbon, oxygen, nitrate, and optical properties across multiple oceanographic regimes. Building from no prior coverage to a sparse array, deployments are based on prior knowledge of water mass properties, mean frontal locations, mean circulation and eddy variability, winds, air-sea heat/freshwater/carbon exchange, prior Argo trajectories, and float simulations in the Southern Ocean State Estimate and Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM). Twelve floats deployed from the 2014-2015 Polarstern cruise from South Africa to Antarctica are used as a test case to evaluate the deployment strategy adopted for SOCCOM's 20 deployment cruises and 126 floats to date. After several years, these floats continue to represent the deployment zones targeted in advance: (1) Weddell Gyre sea ice zone, observing the Antarctic Slope Front, and a decadally-rare polynya over Maud Rise; (2) Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) including the topographically steered Southern Zone chimney where upwelling carbon/nutrient-rich deep waters produce surprisingly large carbon dioxide outgassing; (3) Subantarctic and Subtropical zones between the ACC and Africa; and (4) Cape Basin. Argo floats and eddy-resolving HYCOM simulations were the best predictors of individual SOCCOM float pathways, with uncertainty after 2 years of order 1,000 km in the sea ice zone and more than double that in and north of the ACC.

2.
Ann Rev Mar Sci ; 8: 185-215, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26515811

ABSTRACT

Global ship-based programs, with highly accurate, full water column physical and biogeochemical observations repeated decadally since the 1970s, provide a crucial resource for documenting ocean change. The ocean, a central component of Earth's climate system, is taking up most of Earth's excess anthropogenic heat, with about 19% of this excess in the abyssal ocean beneath 2,000 m, dominated by Southern Ocean warming. The ocean also has taken up about 27% of anthropogenic carbon, resulting in acidification of the upper ocean. Increased stratification has resulted in a decline in oxygen and increase in nutrients in the Northern Hemisphere thermocline and an expansion of tropical oxygen minimum zones. Southern Hemisphere thermocline oxygen increased in the 2000s owing to stronger wind forcing and ventilation. The most recent decade of global hydrography has mapped dissolved organic carbon, a large, bioactive reservoir, for the first time and quantified its contribution to export production (∼20%) and deep-ocean oxygen utilization. Ship-based measurements also show that vertical diffusivity increases from a minimum in the thermocline to a maximum within the bottom 1,500 m, shifting our physical paradigm of the ocean's overturning circulation.


Subject(s)
Carbon/analysis , Seawater/chemistry , Climate , Oceanography/instrumentation , Ships , Temperature , Water Movements
3.
Aust Nurs J ; 14(3): 3, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16989383
5.
J Anat ; 163: 1-5, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2558097

ABSTRACT

Muscle fibre number and cross sectional area were studied in the response to immobilisation atrophy of the long head of the triceps brachii. Following eight weeks of immobilisation, fibre number of the muscle from the immobilised limb was compared to that of the contralateral control limb in six rats. Mean fibre cross sectional area of the LHT from the immobilised limb was compared to that of the contralateral control for another six animals. Atrophy, as estimated by a decrease in wet muscle weight, was 38.0% for the group used for fibre number estimations and 45.7% for the group used for fibre area. Fibre counts revealed no difference between muscles from immobilised and control limbs. Mean fibre area was 42.1% less for the muscle from the immobilised limb compared to the control limb. The results of this study indicate that atrophy of the LHT produced by immobilisation of the forelimb is the result of atrophy of the muscle fibres without a decrease in muscle fibre number.


Subject(s)
Immobilization/adverse effects , Muscles/anatomy & histology , Muscular Atrophy/pathology , Animals , Histocytochemistry , Immobilization/physiology , Male , Muscles/cytology , Muscular Atrophy/etiology , Muscular Atrophy/physiopathology , Nitrates , Nitric Acid , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
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