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Featured researches published by Sönke Hohn.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Suitable environmental ranges for potential coral reef habitats in the tropical ocean.

Yi Guan; Sönke Hohn; Agostino Merico

Coral reefs are found within a limited range of environmental conditions or tolerance limits. Estimating these limits is a critical prerequisite for understanding the impacts of climate change on the biogeography of coral reefs. Here we used the diagnostic model ReefHab to determine the current environmental tolerance limits for coral reefs and the global distribution of potential coral reef habitats as a function of six factors: temperature, salinity, nitrate, phosphate, aragonite saturation state, and light. To determine these tolerance limits, we extracted maximum and minimum values of all environmental variables in corresponding locations where coral reefs are present. We found that the global, annually averaged tolerance limits for coral reefs are 21.7—29.6 °C for temperature, 28.7—40.4 psu for salinity, 4.51 μmol L-1 for nitrate, 0.63 μmol L-1 for phosphate, and 2.82 for aragonite saturation state. The averaged minimum light intensity in coral reefs is 450 μmol photons m-2 s-1. The global area of potential reef habitats calculated by the model is 330.5 × 103 km2. Compared with previous studies, the tolerance limits for temperature, salinity, and nutrients have not changed much, whereas the minimum value of aragonite saturation in coral reef waters has decreased from 3.28 to 2.82. The potential reef habitat area calculated with ReefHab is about 121×103 km2 larger than the area estimated from the charted reefs, suggesting that the growth potential of coral reefs is higher than currently observed.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2018

Sundaland Peat Carbon Dynamics and Its Contribution to the Holocene Atmospheric CO2 Concentration

Jesse F. Abrams; Sönke Hohn; Tim Rixen; Agostino Merico

The Sunda Shelf is a large submerged extension of the continental shelf of mainland Asia, joining the islands of Borneo, Java, and Sumatra, and forming the shallow seabed of the South China Sea. Recent studies identified present day peatlands in Southeast Asia as a globally important carbon reservoir. However, little is known about Sundaland paleo-peatlands and their role in the global carbon cycle since the Last Glacial Maximum. Using a topography based, sea level driven model, we estimate the potential spatial extent of peatlands during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene across the low-lying Sundaland plains. We then use the estimated peatland area together with data on carbon accumulation rates to calculate the total peat carbon pool on the Sunda Shelf. Finally, using a global biogeochemical model, we analyze the relative influence of the predicted Sundaland peat dynamics and other carbon change mechanisms, specifically high-latitude forest growth and peat formation, shallow sea carbonate deposition, ocean warming, and combinations of them, on the global carbon cycle of the Holocene. We identify a feedback mechanism between sea level and peatland carbon sequestration in Sundaland that reduced atmospheric CO2 concentration by about 4–5 ppm and increased δ13C by 0.05‰ during the Holocene. We also show that a concurrence of mechanisms that includes Sundaland peat dynamics produces model results that are consistent with proxy records, especially with respect to δ13C.


Biogeosciences | 2012

Modelling coral polyp calcification in relation to ocean acidification

Sönke Hohn; Agostino Merico


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2010

Response to and recovery from nitrogen and silicon starvation in Thalassiosira weissflogii: growth rates, nutrient uptake and C, Si and N content per cell

Christina L. De La Rocha; Anja Terbrüggen; Christoph Völker; Sönke Hohn


Global Change Biology | 2016

The impact of Indonesian peatland degradation on downstream marine ecosystems and the global carbon cycle

Jesse F. Abrams; Sönke Hohn; Tim Rixen; Antje Baum; Agostino Merico


Albertiana | 2018

First workshop on the Carnian Pluvial Episode (Late Triassic): a report

Jacopo Dal Corso; Michael J. Benton; Massimo Bernardi; Matthias Franz; Piero Gianolla; Sönke Hohn; Evelyn Kustatscher; Agostino Merico; Guido Roghi; Alastair Ruffell; James G. Ogg; Nereo Preto; Alexander R. Schmidt; Leyla J. Seyfullah; Michael J. Simms; Zhiqiang Shi; Yang Zhang


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2014

Sizing-up nutrient uptake kinetics: combining a physiological trade-off with size-scaling of phytoplankton traits

S. Lan Smith; Agostino Merico; Sönke Hohn; Gunnar Brandt


EPIC3NIC Symposium 2008 : symposium, 20-21 February 2008, Forschungszentrum Jülich ; proceedings / organized by John von Neumann Institute for Computing. Ed. by Gernot Münster ... Jülich : Forschungszentrum Jülich, 289-296. (NIC series ; 39), ISBN: 978-3-9810843-5-1 | 2008

High-resolution modelling of phytoplankton distribution and adaptation.

Martin Losch; Melvin Schröter; Sönke Hohn; Christoph Völker


EPIC3The 45th International Liège Colloquium on Ocean Dynamics - The variability of primary production in the ocean: from the synoptic to the global scale, Liège (Belgium), 2013-05-13-2013-05-17 | 2013

Estimating Oceanic Export Production based on 3D coupled physical-biogeochemical modelling

Svetlana Loza; Christoph Völker; Martin Losch; Sönke Hohn


EPIC32012 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting, Japan, 2012-07-08-2012-07-13Shiga, Japan, Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography | 2012

IMPACT OF DIATOM Si:N STOICHIOMETRY ON MARINE PRODUCTION AND PARTICLE EXPORT IN A GLOBAL MODEL

Tingting Wang; Christoph Völker; Judith Hauck; Sönke Hohn; Dieter Wolf-Gladrow

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Christoph Völker

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Dieter Wolf-Gladrow

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Martin Losch

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Justus van Beusekom

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Tim Rixen

University of Hamburg

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Svetlana Loza

Shirshov Institute of Oceanology

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