1000 resultados para Marine resupply
Resumo:
Les changements climatiques amènent des transformations profondes de l’environnement arctique. La diminution de l’étendue de la couverture de glace permet un accès facilité aux ressources naturelles et aux communautés nordiques. Au Canada, la région arctique est caractérisée par une géographie archipélagique et un réseau de transport rudimentaire. Le transport maritime est le mode privilégié pour l’acheminement du fret aux communautés et aux sites industriels de l’Arctique. La littérature scientifique présente des lacunes importantes au sujet de la navigation commerciale dans l’Arctique canadien. Peu d’études portent sur le trafic de ravitaillement en raison de son volume peu élevé et de la faible diversité des types de produits transportés, bien qu’il s’agisse d’une activité grandement significative pour les populations et l’économie du Nord. Cette recherche vise à combler cette lacune en dressant un portrait du transport maritime et de la performance des opérations portuaires dans l’Arctique canadien. L’étude est structurée en quatre parties. Une analyse du trafic et des échanges maritimes est d’abord réalisée sous trois échelles : internationale, nationale et intra-arctique. Ensuite, l’étude de la flotte et des routes fait ressortir la distribution géographique des transporteurs. Puis, la performance des ports est mesurée grâce à des indicateurs et un système de cotation. Finalement, une évaluation des opérations maritimes arctiques est menée par l’entremise d’informations récoltées lors d’entrevues avec les membres de l’industrie maritime, de conférences et de travail de terrain. Les sujets abordés concernent l’évolution de la desserte, les défis posés par la navigation en milieu arctique et le développement des ports du Nord canadien. Les résultats de l’étude mènent à la conclusion que le transport maritime dans l’Arctique est caractérisé par une croissance positive du volume acheminé et une implication profonde des transporteurs dédiés à la desserte nordique, mais des infrastructures portuaires et maritimes sous-développées.
Resumo:
Stable isotopes of N provide a new approach to the study of algal production in the ocean, yet knowledge of the isotope fractionation (epsilon) in various oceanic regimes is lacking. Here we report large and rapid changes in isotope composition (delta(15)N) of 2 coastal diatoms and 2 clones (open and coastal) of a coccolithophore grown in the simultaneous presence of nitrate, ammonium and urea under varying conditions of N availability (i.e. N-sufficiency and N-starvation followed by N-resupply) and hence different physiological states, During N-sufficiency, the delta(15)N of particulate organic N (PON) was well reproduced, using a model derived from Rayleigh distillation theory, with constant epsilon similar to that for growth on each individual N source. However, following N-resupply, the variations in delta(15)N(PON) could be well explained only in the case of the open ocean Emiliania huxleyi, with epsilon similar to N-sufficient conditions. It was concluded that the mechanism of isotope fractionation changed rapidly with N availability for the 3 coastal clones. However, in the case of E. huxleyi isolated from the Subarctic Pacific Ocean, no evidence of a change in mechanism was found, suggesting that perhaps open ocean species can quickly recover from N-depleted conditions.
Resumo:
Brucite [Mg(OH)2] microbialites occur in vacated interseptal spaces of living scleractinian coral colonies (Acropora, Pocillopora, Porites) from subtidal and intertidal settings in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, and subtidal Montastraea from the Florida Keys, United States. Brucite encrusts microbial filaments of endobionts (i.e., fungi, green algae, cyanobacteria) growing under organic biofilms; the brucite distribution is patchy both within interseptal spaces and within coralla. Although brucite is undersaturated in seawater, its precipitation was apparently induced in the corals by lowered pCO2 and increased pH within microenvironments protected by microbial biofilms. The occurrence of brucite in shallow-marine settings highlights the importance of microenvironments in the formation and early diagenesis of marine carbonates. Significantly, the brucite precipitates discovered in microenvironments in these corals show that early diagenetic products do not necessarily reflect ambient seawater chemistry. Errors in environmental interpretation may arise where unidentified precipitates occur in microenvironments in skeletal carbonates that are subsequently utilized as geochemical seawater proxies.
Resumo:
In this paper we propose an efficient authentication and integrity scheme to support DGPS corrections using the RTCM protocol, such that the identified vulnerabilities in DGPS are mitigated. The proposed scheme is based on the TESLA broadcast protocol with modifications that make it suitable for the bandwidth and processor constrained environment of marine DGPS.
Resumo:
The following technical report describes the approach and algorithm used to detect marine mammals from aerial imagery taken from manned/unmanned platform. The aim is to automate the process of counting the population of dugongs and other mammals. We have developed and algorithm that automatically presents to a user a number of possible candidates of these mammals. We tested the algorithm in two distinct datasets taken from different altitudes. Analysis and discussion is presented in regards with the complexity of the input datasets, the detection performance.