- Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
- Marine Biology and Ecology Research
- Marine and fisheries research
- Marine and coastal plant biology
- Marine Ecology and Invasive Species
- Underwater Vehicles and Communication Systems
- Crustacean biology and ecology
- Environmental Monitoring and Data Management
- Environmental Conservation and Management
- Marine and environmental studies
- Marine animal studies overview
- Peatlands and Wetlands Ecology
- Isotope Analysis in Ecology
- Maritime and Coastal Archaeology
- Aquatic Invertebrate Ecology and Behavior
- Marine and coastal ecosystems
Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research
2016-2019
Marine optical imaging has become a major assessment tool in science, policy and public understanding of our seas oceans. Methodology this field is developing rapidly, including hardware, software the ways their application. The aim Imaging Workshop (MIW) to bring together academics, research scientists engineers, as well industrial partners discuss these developments, along with applications, challenges future directions. first MIW was held Southampton, UK April 2014. second MIW, Kiel,...
Abstract In this study, non‐destructive seafloor imaging techniques were employed to assess the benthic community structure of a recently discovered boulder reef within central Arkona Basin Baltic Sea. Data indicate that geographical isolation, water column stratification and temporary oxygen deficiency create an exceptional habitat in sea mud. The forms saline refuge for deepest easternmost known population plumose anemones ( Metridium dianthus Ellis, 1768) Limited connectivity other reefs...
MEPS Marine Ecology Progress Series Contact the journal Facebook Twitter RSS Mailing List Subscribe to our mailing list via Mailchimp HomeLatest VolumeAbout JournalEditorsTheme Sections 633:23-36 (2020) - DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13168 Spatial variability in subtidal hard substrate assemblages across horizontal and vertical gradients: a multi-scale approach using seafloor imaging Kolja Beisiegel1,4,*, Alexander Darr1, Michael L. Zettler1, René Friedland2, Ulf Gräwe3, Mayya Gogina1...
Optic technologies and methods/procedures are established across all areas scales in limnic marine research Germany develop further continuously. The working group “Aquatic Technologies” (AOT) constitutes a common platform for knowledge transfer among scientists users, provides synergistic environment the national developer community will enhance international visibility of German activities this field. This document summarizes AOT-procedures -techniques applied by national research...
Anthropogenic pressure on marine coastal ecosystems is increasing and benthic habitats are particularly affected. Effective resource management needed which rely largely the knowledge of distribution critical species habitats. Rocky reefs such important habitats, hosting diverse macrobenthic assemblages, in turn support higher-order consumers. For brackish Baltic Sea, to be included MPA networks, since human impact dramatic inland sea with a drainage basin including around 85 million people....
Anthropogenic pressure on marine coastal ecosystems is increasing and benthic habitats are particularly affected. Effective resource management needed which rely largely the knowledge of distribution critical species habitats. Rocky reefs such important habitats, hosting diverse macrobenthic assemblages, in turn support higher-order consumers. For brackish Baltic Sea, to be included MPA networks, since human impact dramatic inland sea with a drainage basin including around 85 million people....
The rare in the German North and Baltic Sea waters strictly protected sea star Crossaster papposus was found 2019 2021 during monitoring activities a marine area. This unique observation achieved by using towed camera platform imagery along transect Fehmarn Belt, which allows of much larger area seafloor compared to traditional invasive grab dredge sampling. last time C. documented this 1871, indicating rarity species Sea. Possible explanations for such records occurrence presumably native...