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Zootaxa ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 5091 (2) ◽  
pp. 393-400
Author(s):  
CÉDRIC D’UDEKEM D’ACOZ ◽  
FLORENCE GULLY ◽  
MARC COCHU ◽  
ARTHUR ANKER

The rare symbiotic alpheid shrimp Salmoneus erasimorum Dworschak, Abed-Navandi & Anker, 2000 was previously known from a single specimen collected with a suction pump on the Croatian coast in the Adriatic Sea, together with its host, the ghost shrimp, Gilvossius tyrrhenus (Petagna, 1792). A second record of S. erasimorum is presented here, with a diagnosis and the first colour photographs, based on a single specimen collected in northern Brittany, France, also with a suction pump, but without its host. This is also the first record of the species on the European coast of the Atlantic Ocean. An annotated list and a key to the species of Salmoneus currently known from the eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea are provided.  


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 1075
Author(s):  
Benjamin Doiteau ◽  
Meredith Dournaux ◽  
Nadège Montoux ◽  
Jean-Luc Baray

Atmospheric rivers are important atmospheric features implicated in the global water vapor budget, the cloud distribution, and the associated precipitation. The ARiD (Atmospheric River Detector) code has been developed to automatically detect atmospheric rivers from water vapor flux and has been applied to the ECMWF ERA5 archive over the period 1980–2020 above the Atlantic Ocean and Europe. A case study of an atmospheric river formed in the East Atlantic on August 2014 that reached France has been detailed using ECMWF ERA5 reanalysis, ground based observation data, and satellite products such as DARDAR, AIRS, GPCP, and GOES. This atmospheric river event presents a strong interaction with an intense upper tropospheric jet stream, which induced stratosphere–troposphere exchanges by tropopause fold. A 1980–2020 climatology of atmospheric rivers over Europe has been presented. The west of France, Iberian Peninsula, and British Islands are the most impacted regions by atmospheric rivers with an occurrence of up to four days per month during the October–April period. Up to 40% of the precipitation observed on the west European coast can be linked to the presence of ARs. No significant trend in the occurrence of the phenomena was found over 1980–2020.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2173
Author(s):  
Kamil Kowalczyk ◽  
Katarzyna Pajak ◽  
Beata Wieczorek ◽  
Bartosz Naumowicz

The main aim of the article was to analyse the actual accuracy of determining the vertical movements of the Earth’s crust (VMEC) based on time series made of four measurement techniques: satellite altimetry (SA), tide gauges (TG), fixed GNSS stations and radar interferometry. A relatively new issue is the use of the persistent scatterer InSAR (PSInSAR) time series to determine VMEC. To compare the PSInSAR results with GNSS, an innovative procedure was developed: the workflow of determining the value of VMEC velocities in GNSS stations based on InSAR data. In our article, we have compiled 110 interferograms for ascending satellites and 111 interferograms for descending satellites along the European coast for each of the selected 27 GNSS stations, which is over 5000 interferograms. This allowed us to create time series of unprecedented time, very similar to the time resolution of time series from GNSS stations. As a result, we found that the obtained accuracies of the VMEC determined from the PSInSAR are similar to those obtained from the GNSS time series. We have shown that the VMEC around GNSS stations determined by other techniques are not the same.


2021 ◽  
Vol 263 ◽  
pp. 05047
Author(s):  
Maxim Poleshchuk ◽  
Inna Klimenko

The article is devoted to the potential for the development of tourism in the coastal territories of Russia. The text is to provide possible ways of create the new tourist centers in the several research regions. The coastal territories of the European part of the Russian Federation have great potential for the development as traditional forms of tourism, as innovative with creative technologies, original cruise routes. Territorial and transport accessibility, a variety of natural resourses, great historical potential, a combination of a significant local tourists flow from neighboring and other regions of the country, creates a durable economic base for development tourism in Russia, including the international level.


Climate ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 146
Author(s):  
Maria Manuela Portela ◽  
Luis Angel Espinosa ◽  
Martina Zelenakova

This study addresses the long-term rainfall trends, their temporal variability and uncertainty over mainland Portugal, a small country on the most western European coast. The study was based on monthly, seasonal and annual rainfall series spanning for a period of 106 years, between October 1913 and September 2019 (herein after referred to as global period), at 532 rain gauges evenly distributed over the country (c.a. 6 rain gauges per 1000 km2). To understand the rainfall behavior over time, an initial sub-period with 55 years and a final sub-period with 51 years were also analyzed along with the global period. The trends identification and the assessment of their magnitude were derived using the nonparametric Mann-Kendall (MK) test coupled with the Sen’s slope estimator method. The results showed that after the initial sub-period with prevailing increasing rainfall, the trends were almost exclusively decreasing. They were also so pronounced that they counterbalanced the initial rainfall increase and resulted in equally decreasing trends for the global period. The study also shows that approximately from the late 1960s on, the rainy season pattern has changed, with the last months prior to the dry season showing a sustained decrease of their relative contributions to the annual rainfalls. Overall, the results support the hypothesis of less uncertainty on the pronounced decrease of rainfall over mainland Portugal in recent years, which is expected to continue. They also show that the asymmetry between a less wet North, yet still wet, and an arid South is becoming much more marked.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
В. Зинько ◽  
Keyword(s):  
The City ◽  

According to the results of the latest author’s research, Bosporan city Tyritake was one of early and relatively big centres of the European coast of the Cimmerian Bosporus. At the turn of the last two decades of the 6th century BC after the fire associated with a war cataclysm had broken out, the city was surrounded by a relatively solid fortification walls on an area of at least 5 hectares.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. eaaw5531 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Bevacqua ◽  
D. Maraun ◽  
M. I. Vousdoukas ◽  
E. Voukouvalas ◽  
M. Vrac ◽  
...  

In low-lying coastal areas, the co-occurrence of high sea level and precipitation resulting in large runoff may cause compound flooding (CF). When the two hazards interact, the resulting impact can be worse than when they occur individually. Both storm surges and heavy precipitation, as well as their interplay, are likely to change in response to global warming. Despite the CF relevance, a comprehensive hazard assessment beyond individual locations is missing, and no studies have examined CF in the future. Analyzing co-occurring high sea level and heavy precipitation in Europe, we show that the Mediterranean coasts are experiencing the highest CF probability in the present. However, future climate projections show emerging high CF probability along parts of the northern European coast. In several European regions, CF should be considered as a potential hazard aggravating the risk caused by mean sea level rise in the future.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven M. Van Belleghem ◽  
Carl Vangestel ◽  
Katrien De Wolf ◽  
Zoë De Corte ◽  
Markus Möst ◽  
...  

AbstractWhen species occur in repeated ecologically distinct habitats across their range, adaptation may proceed surprisingly fast and result in parallel evolution. There is increasing evidence that such cases of rapid parallel evolution are fueled by standing genetic variation, but the origin of this genetic variation remains poorly understood. In Pogonus chalceus beetles, short- and long-winged ecotypes have diverged in response to contrasting hydrological regimes and can be repeatedly found along the Atlantic European coast. By analyzing genomic variation across the beetles’ distribution, we reveal that genomically widespread short-wing selected alleles evolved during a singular divergence event, estimated at ~0.19 Mya. The ancient and differentially selected alleles are currently polymorphic in all populations across the range, allowing for the fast evolution of one ecotype from a small number of random individuals, as low as 5 to 15, of the populations of the other ecotype. Our results suggest that cases of fast parallel ecological divergence might be the result of evolution at two different time frames: divergence in the past, followed by repeated selection on the divergently evolved alleles after admixture. We suggest that this mechanism may be common and potentially further driven by periods of geographic isolation imposed by large-scale environmental changes such as glacial cycles.


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