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Conference Reference Connectivity and genetic structure of flatfish for fisheries management and traceability in Belgium.
Early life stages are critical in determining connectivity. Effective fishery management requires understanding of how spawning grounds and nurseries are connected and what processes influence larval retention and dispersal. These mechanisms maintain a high genetic diversity which is essential to grantee population resilience to environmental changes. Marine populations are often believed to be panmictic because there are few obvious barriers to gene flow in the ocean. However, recent work based on Next Generation Sequencing has shown that even highly mobile species have a population structure at reduced spatial scale. Once determined, population structure is the best level to monitor fish stocks. Each population has its own genetic signature therefore traceability system in the industry would highly benefit from a precise mapping and monitoring of stocks, especially for sole in the North Sea. Given its commercial importance in the North Sea fishery, a larger effort has to be made to preserve the flatfish valuable resource. In this project we will address the following questions: 1- Does larval dispersal vary in time and space? 2- What biotic and abiotic factors are driving larval connectivity? 3- Can we define sub-populations based on connectivity patterns? A suite of 1536 SNPs (Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) and state-of-the-art genotyping (Illumina Golden Gate genotyping) have been employed to investigate the genetic population structure of sole larvae and post-larvae at the European scale. We have obtained four groups: (1) a mixed group with populations within the North Sea and eastern English Channel; and the three most geographically extreme populations were clearly separated: (2) the German Bight on one side and (3) the Celtic Sea and (4) the Irish Sea on the other side. Finally, results of hydrodynamic individual based model of larval dispersal developed by Lacroix and collaborators will be compared to collected da¬ta in order to investigate the role of selected biotic and abiotic factors in driving connectivity. Temporal variability will be studied combing three years of intensive sampling and historical data spanning the last two decades. Overall, this study will help the sustainable management of fishery by defining significant ecological units, while the molecular markers will allow tracing any fish present on the market to its origin, hence fighting illegal fishing and enabling efficient traceability.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Origin of the high frequency variability of bio-optical properties in complex coastal environments (OO121246).
This study describes physical processes (mainly the turbulence and re-suspension of particles due to turbulence) which control the micro scale variability of the bio-optical properties in highly turbid coastal waters. Time series analyses of different bio-optical and physical properties (temperature, salinity) have been performed from a boat in coastal waters. The data base gathers high frequency (1 Hz) simultaneous measurements performed during about 12 hours at four different days and locations in the highly turbid coastal environments of North Sea. We mainly focus on the concentrations of Chlorophyll and coloured detrital matter, back-scattering, and attenuation. For each parameter we consider the statistics (mean values, coefficients of variance and probability density functions) and the dynamics (Fourier power spectra). We found that these optical parameters (bbp, bpslope g, Refractive index-n and cp) are influenced by turbulence and inherit some of turbulence characteristics; high frequency noise, scales of variability at lower frequencies.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Seasonal and inter-annual variability of air-sea CO2 fluxes and seawater carbonate chemistry in the Southern North Sea.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Seasonal and inter-annual variability of air-sea CO2 fluxes and seawater carbonate chemistry in the Southern Bight of the North Sea.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Operational oceanographic products for the Belgian scientific community.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Reconstruction of complete space-time surface chlorophyll a (chl), total suspended matter (TSM) and sea temperature (SST) over the North Sea with monovariate and multivariate exploitations of the data interpolating empirical orthogonal functions method.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Reconstruction of missing satellite total suspended matter data over the Southern North Sea and English Channel using Empirical Orthogonal Function decomposition of satellite imagery and hydrodynamical modelling.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Uses of DINEOF algorithm (Data interpolation with Empirical Orthogonal Functions) for reconstruction and analysis of incomplete satellite databases over the North Sea and the Mediterranean, synthesis from the RECOLOUR project.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference REconstruction of COLOUR scenes: project summary, North Sea preliminary results, perspectives.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Conference Reference Physical controls on biogeochemical dynamics along the land-ocean continuum: implications for coastal ocean modelling.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications