Anthony W. Walne
University of Wales
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Featured researches published by Anthony W. Walne.
Ecology | 2004
Graeme C. Hays; Julian D. Metcalfe; Anthony W. Walne
Among air-breathing divers, control of buoyancy through lung volume regulation may be most highly developed in marine turtles. In short, the turtle lung may serve a dual role as both an oxygen store and in buoyancy control. A simple model is developed to show that, for turtles diving up to the maximum depth at which they can still use their lungs to attain neutral buoyancy, the total oxygen store will increase greatly with dive depth, and hence a corresponding increase in dive duration is predicted. Time–depth recorders attached to free-living green turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Ascension Island confirmed a marked increase in dive duration with depth, with the gradient of this relationship being >10 times that seen in diving birds and mammals. Consistent with the prediction that the lungs serve a dual role, we found that, when lead weights were added to some turtles to increase their specific gravity, the mean depth of dives decreased, but for dives to the same depth, weighted animals dived for longer. The depth distribution of green turtles seems to be generally constrained by the maximum depth at which they can still attain close to neutral buoyancy.
Environmental Health | 2011
Stephanie L. Hinder; Graeme C. Hays; Caroline J. Brooks; Angharad P. Davies; Martin Edwards; Anthony W. Walne; Mike B. Gravenor
The relationship between toxic marine microalgae species and climate change has become a high profile and well discussed topic in recent years, with research focusing on the possible future impacts of changing hydrological conditions on Harmful Algal Bloom (HAB) species around the world. However, there is very little literature concerning the epidemiology of these species on marine organisms and human health. Here, we examine the current state of toxic microalgae species around the UK, in two ways: first we describe the key toxic syndromes and gather together the disparate reported data on their epidemiology from UK records and monitoring procedures. Secondly, using NHS hospital admissions and GP records from Wales, we attempt to quantify the incidence of shellfish poisoning from an independent source. We show that within the UK, outbreaks of shellfish poisoning are rare but occurring on a yearly basis in different regions and affecting a diverse range of molluscan shellfish and other marine organisms. We also show that the abundance of a species does not necessarily correlate to the rate of toxic events. Based on routine hospital records, the numbers of shellfish poisonings in the UK are very low, but the identification of the toxin involved, or even a confirmation of a poisoning event is extremely difficult to diagnose. An effective shellfish monitoring system, which shuts down aquaculture sites when toxins exceed regularity limits, has clearly prevented serious impact to human health, and remains the only viable means of monitoring the potential threat to human health. However, the closure of these sites has an adverse economic impact, and the monitoring system does not include all toxic plankton. The possible geographic spreading of toxic microalgae species is therefore a concern, as warmer waters in the Atlantic could suit several species with southern biogeographical affinities enabling them to occupy the coastal regions of the UK, but which are not yet monitored or considered to be detrimental.
Nature Communications | 2017
William J. Chivers; Anthony W. Walne; Graeme C. Hays
The response of marine plankton to climate change is of critical importance to the oceanic food web and fish stocks. We use a 60-year ocean basin-wide data set comprising >148,000 samples to reveal huge differences in range changes associated with climate change across 35 plankton taxa. While the range of dinoflagellates and copepods tended to closely track the velocity of climate change (the rate of isotherm movement), the range of the diatoms moved much more slowly. Differences in range shifts were up to 900 km in a recent warming period, with average velocities of range movement between 7 km per decade northwards for taxa exhibiting niche plasticity and 99 km per decade for taxa exhibiting niche conservatism. The differing responses of taxa to global warming will cause spatial restructuring of the plankton ecosystem with likely consequences for grazing pressures on phytoplankton and hence for biogeochemical cycling, higher trophic levels and biodiversity.
Archive | 2004
Anthony W. Walne; Philip C. Reid
The Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) Survey has been towed monthly by commercial vessels to monitor the distribution of plankton in the surface waters of the Northeast Atlantic Ocean for over seventy years. In the past, between 1949 and 1981, CPRs were towed to Ocean Weather Station (OWS) Mike in the Norwegian Sea until sampling ceased due to financial constraints. Summary results from this early survey in the Norwegian Sea are outlined. We also discuss options for the resumption of monitoring of the surface plankton of the Norwegian Sea with CPR tows to OWS Mike and new routes around northern Norway and to Svalbard. In a climate change scenario, for assessment of ecosystems and fishery management an urgent need to improve monitoring of the plankton of Nordic Seas is identified.
Nature Climate Change | 2012
Stephanie L. Hinder; Graeme C. Hays; Martin Edwards; Emily C. Roberts; Anthony W. Walne; Mike B. Gravenor
Journal of Plankton Research | 2003
Sonia D. Batten; Anthony W. Walne; Martin Edwards; S. Groom
Journal of Plankton Research | 2002
Eurgain H John; Sonia D. Batten; Darren Stevens; Anthony W. Walne; Tanya Jonas Jonas; Graeme C. Hays
Journal of Plankton Research | 2011
Sonia D. Batten; Anthony W. Walne
Journal of Plankton Research | 2012
Stephanie L. Hinder; Jane E. Manning; Mike B. Gravenor; Martin Edwards; Anthony W. Walne; Peter H. Burkill; Graeme C. Hays
Journal of Plankton Research | 2013
Dionysios E. Raitsos; Anthony W. Walne; Samantha Lavender; Priscilla Licandro; Philip C. Reid; Martin Edwards