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00. Ocean Decade - Philippines

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://repository.unesco.gov.ph/handle/123456789/7

The UNACOM Online and Digital Enabling Library and Index is developed to support the alignment of research, investments, and community initiatives toward contributing to a well-functioning, productive, resilient, sustainable, and inspiring ocean. The goal is to enable the government, partner agencies, and UNESCO to develop more robust Science-Informed Policies and facilitate a stronger Science-Policy Interface through the gathered data, information, and knowledge related to the Ocean Decade in the Philippines.

Particularly, it aims to:
  • Gather and index all publications, reports, policies, laws, legislations, articles, and other documents of the Philippine National Committee on Marine Sciences (NCMS) related to the Ocean Decade.
  • Disseminate and promote these publications, reports, policies, and other documents on the initiatives and actions to address the Ocean Decade challenges.

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  • Calanoides acutus in Gerlache Strait, Antarctica II. Solving an inverse problem in population dynamics
    Huntley, M. E.; Zhou, M.; Lopez, M. D. G. (Elsevier, 1994-01)
    A population dynamics model of the overwintering Southern Ocean copepod, Calanoides acutus, was constructed based on field observations of abundance in the Gerlache Strait during November 1989. We used an analytical solution to solve an inverse problem to determine rates of stage-specific mortality and development as the population emerged from overwintering diapause. Model predictions of mortality rates for CIV, CV and CVI copepodites were 0.068, 0 and 0.131 day−1, respectively. Best fit solutions of the model predict that late-stage copepodites emerge from diapause by “pulse moulting;” overwintering copepodites appear to emerge from diapause en masse in a relatively brief period prior to the annual spring bloom, rather than moulting at the comparatively slow rates observed in summer. We suggest that the modelling approach we used may have application to many species of copepods whose populations overwriter.