RBINS Open Access Library
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be
Collision risk for six seabirds species in the first Belgian offshore wind farm zone
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2020/techreportreference.2021-03-31.7119159416
No publisherReportRBINS Publication(s)Peer Review2021/03/31 10:30:00 GMT+1Techreport ReferenceCollision risk for six seabird species in the first Belgian offshore wind farm zone
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2020/techreportreference.2021-03-31.2915575019
No publisherReportRBINS Publication(s)Peer Review2021/03/31 10:25:00 GMT+1Techreport ReferenceCollecting bees on Mount Meru In Tanzania and the discovery of a new cleptoparasitic species of Lasioglossum (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Halictidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2019/articlereference.2019-10-30.8168938234
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2019/10/30 09:30:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceColéoptères saproxyliques du Bois de Mortroux: Dircaea australis (Melandryidae) et Corticens bicoloroides (Tenebrionidae); coléoptères nouveaux pour la faune belge
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2019-04-25.5729673716
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2019/04/25 10:31:33 GMT+1Article ReferenceCoalification maps for the Westphalian of the Campine coal basin
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/bookreference.2014-01-09.5691276892
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2014/01/10 07:55:00 GMT+1Book ReferenceCO2-enhanced oil recovery in the North Sea region and its importance for Belgium
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2016/inproceedingsreference.2016-03-14.1690195644
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewAbstract of an Oral Presentation or a Poster2016/03/14 15:27:48 GMT+1Inproceedings ReferenceCO2 storage opportunities in Belgium
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/inproceedingsreference.2013-08-09.3131789318
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewOpen AccessImpact FactorInternational Redaction Board2014/02/04 16:09:26 GMT+1Inproceedings Reference CO2 capture and storage: inevitable for a climate Friendly Belgium.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/bookreference.2013-08-09.0970298442
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2013/08/12 08:33:47 GMT+1Book ReferenceClimate change effects on the ecophysiology and ecological functioning of an offshore wind farm artificial hard substrate community
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2022/articlereference.2022-10-13.1836892506
In the effort towards a decarbonised future, the local effects of a proliferating offshore wind farm (OWF) industry add to and interact with the global effects of marine climate change. This study aimed to quantify potential ecophysiolog- ical effects of ocean warming and acidification and to estimate and compare the cumulative clearance potential of suspended food items by OWF epifauna under current and future climate conditions. To this end, this study combined ecophysiological responses to ocean warming and acidification of three dominant colonising species on OWF artificial hard substrates (the blue mussel Mytilus edulis, the tube-building amphipod Jassa herdmani and the plumose anemone Metridium senile). In general, mortality, respiration rate and clearance rate increased during 3- to 6-week experimental exposures across all three species, except for M. senile, who exhibited a lower clearance rate in the warmed treatments (+3 °C) and an insensitivity to lowered pH (−0.3 pH units) in terms of survival and respiration rate. Ocean warming and acidification affected growth antagonistically, with elevated temperature being beneficial for M. edulis and lowered pH being beneficial for M. senile. The seawater volume potentially cleared from suspended food particles by this AHS colonising community increased significantly, extending the affected distance around an OWF foundation by 9.2% in a future climate scenario. By using an experimental multi-stressor approach, this study thus demonstrates how ecophysiology underpins functional responses to climate change in these environments, highlighting for the first time the integrated, cascading potential effects of OWFs and climate change on the marine ecosystem.No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2023/01/19 10:27:02 GMT+1Article ReferenceChrysogaster rondanii Maibach & Goeldlin de Tiefenau, 1995 in Belgium: diagnosis, ecology and distribution (Diptera: Syrphidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2016-01-21.5769544940
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2016/01/21 14:25:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceCharacteristics of the pegmatite-hosted Sn and Nb-Ta mineralisation of the Gatumba area, Rwanda: Preliminary results
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/inproceedingsreference.2013-02-04.7254022169
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Abstract of an Oral Presentation or a Poster2013/02/04 13:45:00 GMT+1Inproceedings ReferenceCharacteristics of the Boom Clay organic matter, a review
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/bookreference.2014-01-13.1903633305
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2014/01/14 07:55:37 GMT+1Book ReferenceChanges in chlorophyll concentration and phenology in the North Sea in relation to de‐eutrophication and sea surface warming
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2019/articlereference.2019-11-20.2477621770
At least two major drivers of phytoplankton production have changed in recent decades in the North Sea: sea surface temperature (SST) has increased by ~ 1.6°C between 1988 and 2014, and the nitrogen and phosphorus loads from surrounding rivers have decreased from the mid‐1980s onward, following reduction policies. Long time series spanning four decades (1975–2015) of nutrients, chlorophyll (Chl), and pH measurements in the Southern and Central North Sea were analyzed to assess the impact of both the warming and the de‐eutrophication trends on Chl. The de‐eutrophication process, detectable in the reduction of nutrient river loads to the sea, caused a decrease of nutrient concentrations in coastal waters under riverine influence. A decline in annual mean Chl was observed at 11 out of 18 sampling sites (coastal and offshore) in the period 1988–2016. Also, a shift in Chl phenology was observed around 2000, with spring bloom formation occurring earlier in the year. A long time series of pH in the Southern North Sea showed an increase until the mid‐1980s followed by a rapid decrease, suggesting changes in phytoplankton production that would support the observed changes in Chl. Linear correlations, however, did not reveal significant relationships between Chl variability and winter nutrients or SST at the sampling sites. We propose that the observed changes in Chl (annual or seasonal) around 2000 are a response of phytoplankton dynamics to multiple stressors, directly or indirectly influenced by de‐eutrophication and climate warming.No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewOpen Access2019/11/20 12:50:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceCGS Europe knowledge-dissemination workshop Antwerp, Belgium
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/techreportreference.2013-08-07.0035539020
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2013/08/07 10:07:54 GMT+1Techreport ReferenceCerambyx cerdo Linnaeus, 1758 en Belgique (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/articlereference.2014-03-26.8567701264
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)2014/03/26 09:55:41 GMT+1Article Reference