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| Open AccessIncreasing tropical cyclone intensity in the western North Pacific partly driven by warming Tibetan Plateau
The weakened vertical wind shear is the primary driver behind increasing tropical cyclone intensity in the western North Pacific monsoon trough. This weakening is partly driven by warming in the Tibetan Plateau.
- Jing Xu
- , Ping Zhao
- & Lu Liu
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Article
| Open AccessSevere 21st-century ocean acidification in Antarctic Marine Protected Areas
Biodiversity in established or proposed Antarctic Marine Protected Areas is threatened by climate change. The authors show that projected ocean acidification is severe in Antarctic coastal waters due to strong vertical mixing of anthropogenic carbon.
- Cara Nissen
- , Nicole S. Lovenduski
- & Judith Hauck
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| Open AccessGlobal increase in tropical cyclone ocean surface waves
Ocean waves caused by tropical cyclones show a significant global increase of energy and area over the last 44 years, leading to critical emerging wave hazard.
- Jian Shi
- , Xiangbo Feng
- & Jinhai Zheng
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| Open AccessIncreased Asian aerosols drive a slowdown of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Increased anthropogenic aerosol emissions from Asia generate circumglobal Rossby waves that contribute to the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation slowdown by suppressing heat loss in the Labrador Sea.
- Fukai Liu
- , Xun Li
- & Lei Zhou
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| Open AccessDisentangling microbial networks across pelagic zones in the tropical and subtropical global ocean
This study investigates the dynamic associations among microbes in the world’s tropical and subtropical oceans. It reveals that potential interactions vary with ocean depth and location, with most surface associations not persisting in deeper waters. The results contribute to understanding the ocean microbiome in the context of global change.
- Ina M. Deutschmann
- , Erwan Delage
- & Ramiro Logares
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| Open AccessUncertainties in critical slowing down indicators of observation-based fingerprints of the Atlantic Overturning Circulation
Ben-Yami et al. present methods to quantify uncertainties and address biases in indicators for detecting stability changes in key Earth system components. Data gap filling introduces biases, but the stability decline in the North Atlantic remains significant.
- Maya Ben-Yami
- , Vanessa Skiba
- & Niklas Boers
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| Open AccessParticle-associated denitrification is the primary source of N2O in oxic coastal waters
Incomplete denitrification associated with the micro-niche of marine particles, instead of nitrification as previously assumed, is a major source of N2O in the turbid coastal waters, even though the water is well-oxygenated.
- Xianhui S. Wan
- , Hua-Xia Sheng
- & Shuh-Ji Kao
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Article
| Open AccessAnchovy boom and bust linked to trophic shifts in larval diet
A characteristic of costal-pelagic fishes is their large population size fluctuations, yet the drivers remain elusive. Here, the authors analyze a 45-year timeseries of nitrogen stable isotopes measured in larvae of Northern Anchovy and find that high energy transfer efficiency from the base of the food web up to young larvae confers high survival and recruitment to the adult population.
- Rasmus Swalethorp
- , Michael R. Landry
- & Andrew R. Thompson
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Article
| Open AccessMicroplastic burden in marine benthic invertebrates depends on species traits and feeding ecology within biogeographical provinces
Microplastic uptake by animals is often assumed to reflect the level of contamination in the environment. Here, the authors compile a global inventory of individual microplastic body burden in benthic marine invertebrates and find that feeding mode and geographic location are more important predictors than environmental microplastic loading.
- Adam Porter
- , Jasmin A. Godbold
- & Tamara S. Galloway
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Article
| Open AccessVolcaniclastic density currents explain widespread and diverse seafloor impacts of the 2022 Hunga Volcano eruption
During the 2022 Hunga Volcano eruption, 10 km3 of seafloor material was removed, fueling long-run out seafloor density currents. These powerful currents damaged seafloor cables over a length of >100 km, reshaped the seafloor, and caused mass-mortality of seafloor life.
- Sarah Seabrook
- , Kevin Mackay
- & Michael J. M. Williams
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| Open AccessCompensating transport trends in the Drake Passage frontal regions yield no acceleration in net transport
Time series of high spatial resolution ocean temperature, salinity and velocity across Drake Passage show that compensating trends across the frontal regions yield no acceleration in net transport over the last 15 years despite increased wind stress.
- Manuel O. Gutierrez-Villanueva
- , Teresa K. Chereskin
- & Janet Sprintall
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Article
| Open AccessOcean warming drives rapid dynamic activation of marine-terminating glacier on the west Antarctic Peninsula
Warm ocean waters and favourable bathymetry caused Cadman Glacier on the Antarctic Peninsula to increase speed by 94% from 2018 to 2019. This led to increased ice discharge, glacier retreat of 8 kilometres, and glacier thinning by 20 meters per year.
- Benjamin J. Wallis
- , Anna E. Hogg
- & Carlos Moffat
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Article
| Open AccessThermal sensitivity of field metabolic rate predicts differential futures for bluefin tuna juveniles across the Atlantic Ocean
In this study, the authors use a dataset of stable isotope compositions of otoliths from Atlantic bluefin tuna to infer the thermal sensitivity of metabolic performance in their first year of life. They then assess the likely trajectories of tuna production until end century under differing emission scenarios in their two main spawning grounds, the western Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea.
- Clive N. Trueman
- , Iraide Artetxe-Arrate
- & Igaratza Fraile
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| Open AccessExperimental mining plumes and ocean warming trigger stress in a deep pelagic jellyfish
The deep ocean is increasingly subjected to human-induced environmental change, but little is known about species-specific responses to stressors, including those from deep sea mining. This study shows that elevated temperatures and simulated sediment plumes cause physiological stress in a cosmopolitan deep-sea jellyfish, confirming the detrimental impact of seabed mining.
- Vanessa I. Stenvers
- , Helena Hauss
- & Henk-Jan T. Hoving
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| Open AccessDeep-sea origin and depth colonization associated with phenotypic innovations in scleractinian corals
Scleractinian corals are important in both shallow and deep ecosystems. Here, the authors use global spatial distribution data with a phylogenetic approach to examine directionality and speed of colonization during depth diversification, finding an offshore-onshore pattern of evolution and that depth dispersion is associated with phenotypic innovations.
- Ana N. Campoy
- , Marcelo M. Rivadeneira
- & Chris Venditti
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| Open AccessEnhanced subglacial discharge from Antarctica during meltwater pulse 1A
This study presents seawater uranium isotope records based on deep-sea corals from the Drake Passage to track subglacial discharge from the Antarctic Ice Sheet, demonstrating a causal link between enhanced subglacial discharge, retreat of the ice sheet, and the rapid rise in sea levels.
- Tao Li
- , Laura F. Robinson
- & James W. B. Rae
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| Open AccessShort-term acidification promotes diverse iron acquisition and conservation mechanisms in upwelling-associated phytoplankton
Coastal upwelling regions are among the most productive marine ecosystems but may be threatened by amplified ocean acidification. Here the authors show from community to molecular levels that phytoplankton in an upwelling region respond to short-term acidification exposure with iron uptake pathways and strategies that reduce cellular iron demand.
- Robert H. Lampe
- , Tyler H. Coale
- & Andrew E. Allen
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Article
| Open AccessRapid disintegration and weakening of ice shelves in North Greenland
North Greenland ice shelves have lost more than a third of their masses, thinning dramatically from below due to increased ocean temperatures. In response, grounding lines have retreated and the amount of ice discharged into the ocean has increased.
- R. Millan
- , E. Jager
- & A. Bjørk
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Article
| Open AccessAtlantic-origin water extension into the Pacific Arctic induced an anomalous biogeochemical event
The authors show that the appearance of anomalously low oxygen and acidified water on the Chukchi Plateau, a high-seas fishable area of the western Arctic Ocean, is associated with a change in basin-scale ocean circulation related to the recent sea ice loss.
- Shigeto Nishino
- , Jinyoung Jung
- & Sung-Ho Kang
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| Open AccessCoupled carbon and nitrogen cycling regulates the cnidarian–algal symbiosis
Photosymbioses enable efficient nutrient recycling between heterotrophic and phototrophic organisms. This study shows that nutrient cycling in a cnidarian-algal symbiosis is regulated through resource competition between symbiotic partners. Mutualistic interactions can therefore emerge from mutual exploitation in nutrient–exchange symbioses.
- Nils Rädecker
- , Stéphane Escrig
- & Anders Meibom
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| Open AccessA carbon-nitrogen negative feedback loop underlies the repeated evolution of cnidarian–Symbiodiniaceae symbioses
This study found that cnidarian animals including corals, anemones and jellyfish share a common mechanism to regulate their association with symbiotic algae. Despite evolving independently, these animals all use the same carbon-nitrogen negative feedback loop for algae control, shedding light on the repeated evolution of these marine symbiotic relationships.
- Guoxin Cui
- , Jianing Mi
- & Manuel Aranda
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| Open AccessRecent acceleration in global ocean heat accumulation by mode and intermediate waters
By analyzing historical and Argo observations, the authors find that the warming of mode and intermediate water layers drives most of the global upper 2000 m ocean warming, highlighting the outsized heat uptake by regional water masses in both hemispheres.
- Zhi Li
- , Matthew H. England
- & Sjoerd Groeskamp
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| Open AccessCoral endosymbiont growth is enhanced by metabolic interactions with bacteria
A new study reveals that bacterial partners supply essential metabolites to the vital microalgal symbionts of corals, including metabolites that boost symbiont growth. This breakthrough increases our understanding of coral microbial ecology and also opens the door to innovative ways of protecting coral reefs.
- Jennifer L. Matthews
- , Abeeha Khalil
- & Jean-Baptiste Raina
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| Open AccessOveremphasized role of preceding strong El Niño in generating multi-year La Niña events
This study shows the crucial role of subtropical ENSO dynamics linked to the North Pacific Meridional Mode in generating multi-year La Niña events, challenging the traditional views that emphasized the role of El Niño amplitude in the preceding year.
- Ji-Won Kim
- , Jin-Yi Yu
- & Baijun Tian
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| Open AccessMesophotic coral bleaching associated with changes in thermocline depth
Rising global temperatures cause widespread bleaching of shallow coral reefs but mesophotic reefs at depths over 30 metres are thought to be sheltered by cooler waters. Here, at sites in the Chagos Archipelago, the authors show bleaching of corals at depths of 90 metres, which might be due to warm surface waters being pushed deeper by the ocean’s response to the Indian Ocean Dipole.
- Clara Diaz
- , Nicola L. Foster
- & Phil Hosegood
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| Open AccessVertical structures of marine heatwaves
The authors identify four main types of vertical structures of marine heatwaves, with different impact depths and spatio-temporal distributions, that are influenced by multiscale ocean dynamical processes.
- Ying Zhang
- , Yan Du
- & Alistair J. Hobday
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Article
| Open AccessCryo-EM structure of cyanophage P-SCSP1u offers insights into DNA gating and evolution of T7-like viruses
Here the authors unveil the assembly of a cyanophage in its native form, providing insights into DNA gating and infection process of tailed phages. They proposed structure-based analysis for virus evolution and classification.
- Lanlan Cai
- , Hang Liu
- & Shangyu Dang
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| Open AccessGenomic adaptation of giant viruses in polar oceans
This study examines the biogeography and functional gene repertoires of marine eukaryote-infecting large and giant DNA viruses. It shows a clear divide in the viral communities between polar and nonpolar environments, with recurrent evolutionary adaptations to the polar environment likely driven by alterations of their genomic functions.
- Lingjie Meng
- , Tom O. Delmont
- & Hiroyuki Ogata
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Article
| Open AccessMarine viruses disperse bidirectionally along the natural water cycle
Here, the authors provide evidence that marine viruses spread via aerosolization and rain through the natural water cycle. Hosts from the first centimeters of the marine water column show signs of immunity against rain viruses. Those have DNA adaptations facilitating their stay in the air.
- Janina Rahlff
- , Sarah P. Esser
- & Alexander J. Probst
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| Open AccessNutrient and arsenic biogeochemistry of Sargassum in the western Atlantic
The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt is a hazard for coastal communities. Elevated N and P in the GASB are measured, with As content reflecting P limitation. Nutrient availability causes GASB blooms but reducing P would increase As accumulation.
- Dennis Joseph McGillicuddy Jr.
- , Peter Lynn Morton
- & Brian Edward Lapointe
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| Open AccessDrivers of Antarctic sea ice advance
Processes controlling the onset of the Antarctic sea ice season remain unclear. Here, analyses of observations show that ocean solar energy storage and sea ice drift are key drivers, providing insights to understand variations in sea ice season duration.
- Kenza Himmich
- , Martin Vancoppenolle
- & Marion Lebrun
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| Open AccessEcological mechanisms and current systems shape the modular structure of the global oceans’ prokaryotic seascape
This study investigated how ecological mechanisms and large-scale oceanic current systems shape prokaryotic microbial community patterns. They show that prokaryotic communities in the upper 200 m of the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean, the southern Indian Ocean, and the Mediterranean Sea have a modular structure of co-occurring taxa with similar environmental preferences.
- Felix Milke
- , Jens Meyerjürgens
- & Meinhard Simon
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| Open AccessSustainably developing global blue carbon for climate change mitigation and economic benefits through international cooperation
Sustainable development of blue carbon has increased globally over the past two decades. Global cooperation could enable countries to improve blue carbon sustainable development, increase carbon sequestration, and generate up to $136.34 million in 2030 in economic benefits.
- Cuicui Feng
- , Guanqiong Ye
- & Zhenci Xu
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| Open AccessA Lagrangian model for drifting ecosystems reveals heterogeneity-driven enhancement of marine plankton blooms
Modelling a planktonic ecosystem in the ocean is challenging as it is embedded in a patch of water that is continuously moving, stretching, and diluting. This study introduces a new theoretical framework to account for such aspects, tracking a patch of water hosting a drifting ecosystem, along with its physical, environmental and biochemical features.
- Enrico Ser-Giacomi
- , Ricardo Martinez-Garcia
- & Michael J. Follows
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| Open AccessComposition of cetacean communities worldwide shapes their contribution to ocean nutrient cycling
Cetaceans such as dolphins and whales contribute to the cycling of essential nutrients in the surface ocean through defecation. Using a bioenergetic modelling approach, this study shows that the contribution of different cetaceans is heterogeneous both in terms of quantity and in quality, as the nutrient cocktails they release reflect the physiology and ecology of each species.
- Lola Gilbert
- , Tiphaine Jeanniard-du-Dot
- & Jérôme Spitz
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| Open AccessEarthquake-enhanced dissolved carbon cycles in ultra-deep ocean sediments
Earthquakes enhance dissolved carbon production and fuel the microbial activities in hadal trench subsurface sediments, and ultimately strengthen carbon accumulation and transformation in the subduction zones.
- Mengfan Chu
- , Rui Bao
- & Sarah Zellers
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| Open AccessDoubling of surface oceanic meridional heat transport by non-symmetry of mesoscale eddies
Ocean eddies are known to induce global heat transport but how this is influenced by their shape is unknown. Here the authors combine in-situ drifter and satellite data to show that eddy-induced heat transport can be doubled due to their elongated shape.
- Hailin Wang
- , Bo Qiu
- & Zhengguang Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessImpacts of marine heatwaves on top predator distributions are variable but predictable
This study examines the effect of four marine heatwaves in the Northeast Pacific on the distributions of 14 top predators, revealing a wide-array of predator responses both among and within heatwaves. Predator responses were highly predictable, demonstrating capacity for early warning systems of heatwave impacts, similar to weather forecasts.
- Heather Welch
- , Matthew S. Savoca
- & Elliott L. Hazen
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Article
| Open AccessSustainable reference points for multispecies coral reef fisheries
The sustainability of the majority of multispecies reef fisheries around the globe remains unassessed. This study provides context-specific sustainable reference points for coral reef fish using environmental conditions. Using these reference points, they show that most reef fish stocks have failed at least one fisheries sustainability benchmark.
- Jessica Zamborain-Mason
- , Joshua E. Cinner
- & Sean R. Connolly
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| Open AccessIberian Margin surface ocean cooling led freshening during Marine Isotope Stage 6 abrupt cooling events
Based on reconstructions of sea surface temperature and salinity, the authors find that surface freshening did not always trigger cooling during a millennial climate event on the Iberian Margin.
- Hongrui Zhang
- , Yongsong Huang
- & Heather Stoll
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Article
| Open AccessEffects of paleogeographic changes and CO2 variability on northern mid-latitudinal temperature gradients in the Cretaceous
Simulations using a coupled atmosphere-ocean model show that paleogeography-driven reduction in the intensity of surface ocean circulation explains much of the increase in the mid-latitudinal sea surface temperature gradient during the Cretaceous.
- Kaushal Gianchandani
- , Sagi Maor
- & Nathan Paldor
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| Open AccessCryopreservation and revival of Hawaiian stony corals using isochoric vitrification
Cryopreservation is one approach to conserving the genetic diversity of threatened coral reefs but has thus far been limited to difficult-to-obtain coral reproductive material. Using a new cytotechnology called isochoric vitrification, this study reports the successful cryopreservation and revival of whole mature coral fragments.
- Matthew J. Powell-Palm
- , E. Michael Henley
- & Mary Hagedorn
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| Open AccessAtlantic meridional overturning circulation increases flood risk along the United States southeast coast
AMOC-induced heat advection controls ocean temperature in the subtropical North Atlantic, drives year-to-year changes of basin-wide and coastal sea level, and accounts for 30-50% of flood days along the South Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Mexico coasts in 2015-2020.
- Denis L. Volkov
- , Kate Zhang
- & Dimitris Menemenlis
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Article
| Open AccessEmergent increase in coral thermal tolerance reduces mass bleaching under climate change
Marine heatwaves and mass bleaching mortality events threaten the persistence of coral communities on tropical reefs. This study demonstrates that the thermal tolerance of coral communities in Palau has likely increased since the late 1980s. Such ecological resilience could reduce future bleaching impacts if global carbon emissions are cut down.
- Liam Lachs
- , Simon D. Donner
- & James R. Guest
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Article
| Open AccessOn-shelf circulation of warm water toward the Totten Ice Shelf in East Antarctica
The Totten Glacier in East Antarctica is grounded below sea level and vulnerable to ocean forcing. Observations and simulations demonstrate warm water access from offshore to the glacier, facilitated by deep topography off the Sabrina Coast.
- Daisuke Hirano
- , Takeshi Tamura
- & Shigeru Aoki
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| Open AccessGlobal analysis of ocean phytoplankton nutrient limitation reveals high prevalence of co-limitation
Nutrient limitation is a key constraint on ocean productivity. Here, by analysing a compilation of field experiments spanning the global ocean, this study shows that increasing the number of different nutrients supplied significantly increases net phytoplankton growth, suggesting multiple nutrients are often approaching co-limiting levels.
- Thomas J. Browning
- & C. Mark Moore
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| Open AccessDiversity, distribution and intrinsic extinction vulnerability of exploited marine bivalves
Marine bivalves are important components of ecosystems and are exploited for food across the world. This study expands the list of marine bivalves known to be exploited worldwide and then uses a trait-based approach to identify intrinsically vulnerable species and to pinpoint regions with high levels of extinction-prone exploited species, helping to prioritize areas for conservation effort.
- Shan Huang
- , Stewart M. Edie
- & David Jablonski
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Article
| Open AccessSystematic review of cnidarian microbiomes reveals insights into the structure, specificity, and fidelity of marine associations
This study unified cnidarian microbiome data from 186 studies (~ 6.5 billion sequence reads), providing novel insights into cnidarian microbial communities and highlighting key bacteria across sub-phylum, geography, depth and microhabitat. Understanding factors governing microbiome health will support ongoing and future coral preservation efforts.
- M. McCauley
- , T. L. Goulet
- & S. Loesgen
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| Open AccessDecadal changes in Atlantic overturning due to the excessive 1990s Labrador Sea convection
Using high-resolution model experiments, the authors identify the rapid spreading of mid-depth density anomalies from the Labrador to the Irminger Sea as a prime mechanism in the generation of decadal changes in the Atlantic overturning circulation.
- C. W. Böning
- , P. Wagner
- & A. Biastoch