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Resilient Anomaly Detection in Ocean Drifters with Unsupervised Learning, Deep Learning Models, and Energy-Efficient Recovery -
Public Perceptions of Marine and Coastal Restoration in Ireland -
Environmental Constraints and Resilience of Organisms in Abyssal Plain, Whale Fall, Cold Seep and Hydrothermal Vent Environments in the Deep Sea -
VSJE: A Variational-Based Spatial–Spectral Joint Enhancement Method for Underwater Image
Journal Description
Oceans
Oceans
is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal of oceanography, published bimonthly online by MDPI.
- Open Access— free for readers, with article processing charges (APC) paid by authors or their institutions.
- High Visibility: indexed within Scopus, ESCI (Web of Science), GEOBASE, AGRIS, and other databases.
- Rapid Publication: manuscripts are peer-reviewed and a first decision is provided to authors approximately 35 days after submission; acceptance to publication is undertaken in 8.6 days (median values for papers published in this journal in the second half of 2025).
- Journal Rank: CiteScore - Q2 (Oceanography)
- Recognition of Reviewers: APC discount vouchers, optional signed peer review and reviewer names are published annually in the journal.
- Journal Clusters of Water Resources: Water, Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, Hydrology, Resources, Oceans, Limnological Review, Coasts.
Impact Factor:
1.6 (2024);
5-Year Impact Factor:
1.9 (2024)
Latest Articles
Research Trends on Invasive Marine Species in the Mediterranean: A Bibliometric and Topic Modeling Analysis
Oceans 2026, 7(3), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7030037 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea is both a global biodiversity hotspot and the world’s most heavily invaded marine region, where non-indigenous species arrivals are accelerating under intensifying shipping, Suez Canal traffic, aquaculture, and climate warming. Yet, despite rapidly growing research activity, a comprehensive synthesis of
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The Mediterranean Sea is both a global biodiversity hotspot and the world’s most heavily invaded marine region, where non-indigenous species arrivals are accelerating under intensifying shipping, Suez Canal traffic, aquaculture, and climate warming. Yet, despite rapidly growing research activity, a comprehensive synthesis of the scientific literature on Mediterranean marine invasions has been lacking. This study provides the first Mediterranean-wide combined bibliometric and topic-modeling analysis of invasive marine species research, using 3521 unique documents retrieved from Scopus and Web of Science. We quantify temporal growth in publications and citations, map the conceptual structure of the field through co-citation, co-word, and topic modeling, and reveal pronounced regional and thematic biases. Latent Dirichlet Allocation resolves 13 coherent topics, dominated by first records of non-native species, invasive macroalgae, alien species diversity, and ecological impacts, with strong signals for Lessepsian migration and climate-driven range shifts, particularly in the Eastern Mediterranean. Spatial and thematic analyses reveal pronounced regional biases, with invasion hotspots in the Aegean and Levantine seas contrasted by comparatively sparse coverage of western and central sub-basins, and notable gaps in predictive modeling and socioeconomic assessments. The results underscore the need to rebalance effort toward under-studied regions and themes, while leveraging existing collaboration networks and methodological advances to support MSFD (Marine Strategy Framework Directive) implementation, International Maritime Organization (IMO) instruments, and broader ecosystem-based management. The reproducible framework presented here offers a baseline for periodically tracking research evolution and guiding adaptive, transboundary governance of Mediterranean marine bio-invasions.
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Open AccessReview
The Role of Citizen Science Data Standardization for the Marine Strategy Framework Directive Implementation
by
Vasiliki Myrintzou, Nikolaos Kokkos, Dor Edelist, Garabet Kazanjian and Georgios Sylaios
Oceans 2026, 7(3), 36; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7030036 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
Over the past two decades, Citizen Science (CS) has experienced rapid growth, driven by technological advancements and the rise of digital platforms. This work examines the necessity for standardization in Citizen Science data management and discusses how existing data standards can enhance the
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Over the past two decades, Citizen Science (CS) has experienced rapid growth, driven by technological advancements and the rise of digital platforms. This work examines the necessity for standardization in Citizen Science data management and discusses how existing data standards can enhance the impact of citizen-generated data. CS standardization ensures data quality, comparability, reusability, and interoperability, making data suitable for contributing to the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This paper examined 130 Citizen Science publications and found that most collected data referred to the MSFD Descriptor 1 (Biodiversity—44.96%) and Descriptor 10 (Marine Litter—20.93%), followed by the alien species distribution (D2—11.63%), hydrography (D7—6.20%), eutrophication (D5—6.20%), and marine pollution (D8—3.10%). Analysis of 108 publications on SDG alignment revealed that the majority (35.58%) focused on reducing marine pollution. This paper reviews the best practices for effective Citizen Science data management, including standards for data structures, content, values, and exchange. Based on this review, Darwin Core, Ecological Metadata Language (EML), and the OGC SensorThings API appear to be the most suitable standards for MSFD-relevant CS data. Therefore, policymakers could enable the formal integration of standardized CS datasets into MSFD monitoring workflows.
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Open AccessArticle
Balancing Accuracy and Efficiency in the Temporal Resampling of Met-Ocean Data
by
Sara Ramos-Marin and C. Guedes Soares
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 35; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020035 - 16 Apr 2026
Abstract
Harmonising heterogeneous met-ocean time series to a common temporal resolution is a prerequisite for integrated marine renewable energy assessments. Such datasets often differ in their sampling frequency, statistical distribution, and non-stationarity, complicating joint analysis. This study presents a practical multi-criteria framework for selecting
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Harmonising heterogeneous met-ocean time series to a common temporal resolution is a prerequisite for integrated marine renewable energy assessments. Such datasets often differ in their sampling frequency, statistical distribution, and non-stationarity, complicating joint analysis. This study presents a practical multi-criteria framework for selecting temporal interpolation strategies for met-ocean datasets, explicitly balancing prediction accuracy and computational efficiency. Six environmental variables relevant to offshore renewable energy—wind speed, significant wave height, energy period, peak period, global horizontal irradiance, and upper-ocean thermal gradients—are analysed using ten-year reanalysis datasets for the Madeira Archipelago. Six commonly used deterministic time-domain interpolation methods are evaluated within a unified validation framework combining training–test splits, k-fold cross-validation, and Monte Carlo resampling. Their performances are quantified using the relative root mean square error and computational time, integrated through a composite performance score. The results show that makima interpolation provides the most consistent compromise between accuracy and efficiency for most variables in dense, regularly sampled met-ocean datasets, while spline-based approaches perform better for highly skewed solar irradiance. Preprocessing steps, such as detrending and distribution normalisation, yield only marginal improvements for dense, regularly sampled datasets, and method rankings remain stable under moderate changes in accuracy–speed weightings. Rather than proposing a universal interpolator, this work delivers a reproducible decision-support workflow for temporal resampling of multi-variable met-ocean datasets, supporting early-stage marine renewable energy assessments.
Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Offshore Renewable Energy and Related Environmental Science)
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Safety Maneuvering Envelope for Towed Line Arrays Under Steady-State Conditions
by
Zhibo Wang and Qikun Li
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020034 - 10 Apr 2026
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To ensure safe and stable operation of towed array systems in complex marine environments, the concept of a Safe Maneuvering Envelope (SME) for towing maneuvers is proposed based on flexible cable dynamics theory. The dynamic equations of the towed array are established using
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To ensure safe and stable operation of towed array systems in complex marine environments, the concept of a Safe Maneuvering Envelope (SME) for towing maneuvers is proposed based on flexible cable dynamics theory. The dynamic equations of the towed array are established using the Lumped Mass Method. Using diving depth and breaking tension as boundaries, array configuration data sets are calculated for combinations of main cable outer diameter, vessel speed, and deployed cable length. Mapping relationships between vessel speed, cable deployment length, diving depth, and breaking strength are presented to construct the maneuvering safety envelope. This envelope defines the operational range where the array meets design maneuverability criteria. The safety envelope concept provides quantitative operational guidelines for towed array systems and offers crucial theoretical foundations and methodological support for safe system design and risk assessment.
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Open AccessArticle
Physical Coastal Vulnerability Assessment of the Monrovia Coastline (Liberia) Using a Multi-Parameter Coastal Vulnerability Index
by
Titus Karderic Williams, Youssef Fannassi, Zhour Ennouali, Abdelahq Aangri, Tarik Belrhaba, Isaac Tukpah, Aıcha Benmohammadi and Ali Masria
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020033 - 7 Apr 2026
Abstract
This study presents a city-scale physical coastal vulnerability assessment of the 21 km Monrovia coastline (Liberia) using a multi-parameter coastal vulnerability index (CVI). Nine physical parameters—geology/geomorphology, shoreline change rate, elevation, slope, bathymetry, wave height, tidal range, relative sea level rise, and coastal landform
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This study presents a city-scale physical coastal vulnerability assessment of the 21 km Monrovia coastline (Liberia) using a multi-parameter coastal vulnerability index (CVI). Nine physical parameters—geology/geomorphology, shoreline change rate, elevation, slope, bathymetry, wave height, tidal range, relative sea level rise, and coastal landform characteristics—were integrated within an equal-weight ranking framework. The results identify spatially concentrated high vulnerability segments associated with low elevation, sandy geomorphology, and persistent shoreline retreat. The CVI represents a relative exposure screening rather than a predictive risk model. Limitations related to parameter weighting, classification dependency, and temporal heterogeneity are acknowledged. The findings support preliminary spatial prioritization for coastal adaptation planning
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(This article belongs to the Topic Coastal Engineering: Past, Present and Future)
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Marine Litter Monitoring on Apulian Beaches in the Decade 2014–2023: Some Evidence of a Decreasing Trend
by
Nicola Ungaro, Federica Lefons, Annamaria Pastorelli and Enrico Barbone
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 32; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020032 - 7 Apr 2026
Abstract
In recent decades, the issue of marine litter has emerged as a major environmental concern, particularly with regard to plastic litter. The European Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD, 2008/56/EC) requires member states to monitor marine litter along the coast, in the water, and
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In recent decades, the issue of marine litter has emerged as a major environmental concern, particularly with regard to plastic litter. The European Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD, 2008/56/EC) requires member states to monitor marine litter along the coast, in the water, and on the seabed. Since 2014, beach litter monitoring has been carried out in Italy’s coastal regions, an activity entrusted to the Regional Environmental Agencies System (ARPA). ARPA Puglia is responsible for monitoring the Apulian coastline, and this paper summarizes the main results obtained from 2014 to 2023. The monitoring, which was repeated twice a year, consists of a visual census of litter items along a 100-meter stretch of beach in six different locations across the Puglia region. During this period, an average of 506 litter items per 100 m were observed on the six target beaches in Puglia, 90% of which were plastic ones. Among these, single-use plastic items (SUPs) accounted for 37%. A trend analysis reveals a decline in the aggregate quantity of marine litter on Apulian beaches over the past decade, a phenomenon that is particularly evident when considering the SUP subcategory in isolation. This decreasing trend is consistent with the overall pattern observed along the Italian coastline and the coastlines of European seas. Consequently, it can be hypothesized that an increase in awareness of the issue, in conjunction with the implementation of European Directive 2019/904 for the reduction in single-use plastics, has resulted in more responsible practices. However, further efforts are needed to achieve the goal of 20 litter items per 100 m of beach to attain the Good Environmental Status under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. The findings emphasize the importance of constant monitoring of litter items along the shoreline, as well as the integration of new and alternative methodologies (e.g., drone surveys) to evaluate the efficacy of European regulatory implementation.
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(This article belongs to the Topic Conservation and Management of Marine Ecosystems)
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Spatial–Temporal Distribution and Ecological Risks of Quinolone Antibiotics in Coastal Wetlands
by
Haotian Chen, Hashmi Kaiser, Jun Wang and Xuexia Zhu
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 31; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020031 - 2 Apr 2026
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Quinolone antibiotic (QA) residues in various natural environments have recently received massive scientific attention. Nevertheless, there is limited information on the distribution characteristics and potential hazards of antibiotics in coastal wetlands. Here, the occurrence, spatial and seasonal distribution, and ecological risk assessment of
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Quinolone antibiotic (QA) residues in various natural environments have recently received massive scientific attention. Nevertheless, there is limited information on the distribution characteristics and potential hazards of antibiotics in coastal wetlands. Here, the occurrence, spatial and seasonal distribution, and ecological risk assessment of eight QAs including pipemidic acid (PPA), ofloxacin (OFL), enrofloxacin (ENR), ciprofloxacin (CIP), sarafloxacin (SAL), lomefloxacin (LOM), flumequine (FLU), and oxolinic acid (OA) in coastal wetland were investigated through collected water, sediment, benthos, and plant samples along the Jiangsu coastline in four seasons. The results demonstrated that all selected QAs were detected with varying frequencies and degrees, and their mean concentrations in water, sediment, plants, and benthos ranged from n.d. to 6.11 ng L−1, 3.10 μg kg−1, 6.14 μg kg−1, and 17.13 μg kg−1, respectively. The seasonal differences in antibiotic concentration indicated higher values in winter and significantly lower values in summer, while no significant variations were observed between spring and autumn. Based on the risk quotient (RQ) method, the ecological risk assessment revealed medium risks for OFL, ENR, CIP, and LOM, and low or no risks of other QAs. It is suggested that the differences in PNEC values between seasons and toxicity of antibiotic mixtures should be considered in future studies for better illustration of actual risk levels. This research provides fundamental data and an assessment pattern that governments and other scientific groups all over the world could use as reference to evaluate QA residues in coastal wetlands.
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A Spatio-Temporal Study of the Presence of Vessels Within a Natura 2000 Marine Protected Area of the Maltese Islands
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Sarah Anne Abela, Alan Deidun, Adam Gauci and Ritienne Gauci
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020030 - 1 Apr 2026
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Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are essential for preserving marine biodiversity; yet they face challenges from various human pressures, including vessel activities. This study examines the extent, spatial distribution, and temporal variability of vessel activity within the Southwest Marine Protected Area (MT101), a Natura
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Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are essential for preserving marine biodiversity; yet they face challenges from various human pressures, including vessel activities. This study examines the extent, spatial distribution, and temporal variability of vessel activity within the Southwest Marine Protected Area (MT101), a Natura 2000 site off the Maltese Islands, with the aim of identifying where and to what degree different vessel categories overlap with protected marine habitats. Using Automatic Identification System (AIS) data spanning 2017–2022, a cumulative, normalised vessel density approach was applied to five vessel types: passenger, fishing, cargo, tanker, and tug and towing vessel, and spatially integrated with the distribution of four Annex I habitat types, including sandbanks, Posidonia oceanica meadows, reefs, and sea caves. The analysis reveals distinct spatial and temporal hotspots of vessel presence, with passenger and fishing vessels showing consistently high overlap with ecologically sensitive habitats, particularly within bay areas and along sections of the MPA boundary, while cargo, tanker, and tug activities are more concentrated offshore. While direct ecological impacts were not quantified and vessel density serves as a proxy for potential pressure, the results highlight areas where vessel-related pressures are likely to be most pronounced and where management intervention is most urgently required. By linking long-term vessel activity patterns with habitat distribution, this study delivers a spatially explicit and transferable framework for assessing cumulative maritime pressures, providing an evidence base to support targeted, habitat-specific management measures, improved enforcement, and marine spatial planning within MPAs.
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A Comparative Study on Ocean Front Detection in the Northwestern Pacific Using U-Net and Mask R-CNN
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Caixia Shao, Dianjun Zhang and Xuefeng Zhang
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020029 - 31 Mar 2026
Abstract
Ocean fronts play a vital role in modulating climate variability, driving material transport, and maintaining the stability of marine ecosystems. Therefore, accurate identification of ocean fronts is of great significance for marine environmental monitoring and resource management. This study focuses on the Northwestern
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Ocean fronts play a vital role in modulating climate variability, driving material transport, and maintaining the stability of marine ecosystems. Therefore, accurate identification of ocean fronts is of great significance for marine environmental monitoring and resource management. This study focuses on the Northwestern Pacific region and conducts a systematic comparison between two representative deep learning models—U-Net and Mask R-CNN—for automated ocean front detection. The objective is to evaluate the adaptability and strengths of different network architectures in handling multi-scale features, complex background conditions, and boundary delineation, thereby providing a theoretical basis for model selection and application-specific deployment. Experimental results show that U-Net achieves superior spatial consistency in large-scale frontal segmentation, with an IoU of 0.81 and a Dice coefficient of 0.76, while maintaining relatively high computational efficiency. In contrast, Mask R-CNN demonstrates stronger boundary modeling capabilities in detecting small-scale fronts and handling heterogeneous backgrounds, achieving an IoU of 0.78 and a Dice score of 0.73, though at the cost of increased computational demand. Overall, U-Net is more suitable for broad-scale automatic detection of ocean fronts, whereas Mask R-CNN exhibits greater potential in complex scene recognition. Integrating the structural advantages of both models holds promise for further enhancing the stability and accuracy of frontal detection, thereby offering robust technical support for ocean remote sensing analysis and environmental forecasting.
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(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Progress in Ocean Fronts)
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Spatial Priorities for Protecting the Black Sea Harbour Porpoise: Abundance and Habitat Suitability in Bulgarian Waters
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Venceslav Delov, Krastio Dimitrov, Konstantin Mihaylov, Georgi Terziyski, Yana Stoyanova, Petar Dimov, Nikolay Nedyalkov, Gergana Nikolova, Boris Karakushev and Nikolay Natchev
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020028 - 20 Mar 2026
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The Black Sea harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena relicta Abel, 1905) is an endemic cetacean with poorly understood spatial ecology in Bulgarian waters. This study aimed to update knowledge on its distribution, abundance, and habitat use throughout the Bulgarian Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
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The Black Sea harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena relicta Abel, 1905) is an endemic cetacean with poorly understood spatial ecology in Bulgarian waters. This study aimed to update knowledge on its distribution, abundance, and habitat use throughout the Bulgarian Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). We conducted systematic aerial line-transect surveys in all four seasons between October 2022 and October 2023, combined with distance sampling and MaxEnt habitat modelling. Porpoises were present year-round across the EEZ, with marked seasonal shifts in distribution and habitat preferences. Highest densities were observed in spring, while winter distributions were concentrated offshore. Habitat suitability was dynamic, with key high-use areas identified near Cape Emine and in southern offshore waters near the Turkish border. Overall, about 40% of the EEZ represented high-suitability habitat. These findings provide the first comprehensive, year-round baseline for P. p. relicta in Bulgarian waters, highlighting the species’ flexible habitat use and seasonality. The study was conducted under extraordinary conditions due to regional military activity, which may have influenced porpoise behaviour and spatial patterns. The provided results are critical for designing effective conservation and management measures in the face of both natural and anthropogenic pressures and threats.
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The Alien Jellyfish Cassiopea andromeda in the Mediterranean Sea: Invasion Dynamics and Management Strategies
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Patrizia Perzia, Serena Zampardi, Teresa Maggio, Manuela Falautano and Luca Castriota
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 27; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020027 - 18 Mar 2026
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Cassiopea andromeda is an invasive alien jellyfish that is increasingly reported across the Mediterranean Sea, yet its invasion dynamics and ecological implications remain poorly understood. This study provides an updated assessment of its spatial and temporal distribution, evaluates its potential impacts on ecosystem
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Cassiopea andromeda is an invasive alien jellyfish that is increasingly reported across the Mediterranean Sea, yet its invasion dynamics and ecological implications remain poorly understood. This study provides an updated assessment of its spatial and temporal distribution, evaluates its potential impacts on ecosystem services and biodiversity, and explores management options through the 8Rs framework. An aggregated dataset of georeferenced records (1886–2025) was compiled from scientific literature and citizen-science platforms. Spatio–temporal analyses—including kernel density, key spatial distribution characteristics, spatial autocorrelation, and local hotspot detection—were applied to identify invasion phases, aggregation patterns, and directional dispersion. Results reveal two distinct invasion stages: a century-long arrival phase confined to the Levantine Basin, followed by an accelerated expansion since 2008, with a persistent hotspot in the eastern Mediterranean Sea and a westward dispersal trajectory. Evidence of ecological impacts within the Mediterranean Sea remains limited, however studies from other regions indicate both potential benefits and localized negative interactions with marine organisms. Application of the 8Rs model highlights implemented, feasible and challenging coordinated basin-wide strategies to support adaptive management of this alien resource.
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Model Prediction of Macroplastic Distributions in European Marine Basins: Comparison with Beach and Floating Macroplastic Observations and Estimation of Model Accuracy
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Elisa Garcia-Gorriz, Diego Macias-Moy, Daniel González-Fernández, Antonella Arcangeli, Nuno Ferreira-Cordeiro, Olaf Duteil, Svetla Miladinova, Ove Pärn, Luis Francisco Ruiz-Orejón, Eugenia Pasanisi, Roberto Crosti and Léa David
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020026 - 12 Mar 2026
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Accumulation of plastic litter in the marine environment is a pressing global concern. To study this issue, we use the Blue2 Modelling Framework (Blue2MF), an integrated modelling tool developed by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission. Our study uses the
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Accumulation of plastic litter in the marine environment is a pressing global concern. To study this issue, we use the Blue2 Modelling Framework (Blue2MF), an integrated modelling tool developed by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission. Our study uses the Lagrangian model LTRANS-Zlev (LTRANS) in the Blue2MF to simulate the trajectories, distribution, and accumulation of macroplastics in five European marine basins: the Baltic Sea, Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Atlantic Northwest European Shelf, and Atlantic Southwest European Shelf. By incorporating model-estimated macroplastic inputs from land and estimations of maritime (fishing) sources, we simulate distribution patterns of marine macroplastics between 2016 and 2018. Our study addresses the challenges involved in modelling the spatial distribution and abundances of macroplastics with the LTRANS model and the factors that may condition the estimation of the model accuracy when model results are compared/validated with marine litter observations available. We compare our model results with available observations, achieving a good agreement between predicted and observed macroplastic distributions and abundances and estimating the model accuracy for both beached and floating macroplastics. Our study provides a basis for future forecast runs to evaluate the impact of policy/management options on marine macroplastic pollution in European Seas.
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Research on Wake Characteristics of Dynamic Yawing Offshore Wind Turbine by Proper Orthogonal Decomposition
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Oussama Sabbar, Bowen Zhang, Jie Ge and Longyan Wang
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020025 - 9 Mar 2026
Abstract
The wake that forms behind a yawing wind turbine is a complex flow region that can affect the performance of downstream turbines in offshore wind farms. It contains various flow features, including velocity deficit, shear layers, and vortex structures, which evolve in both
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The wake that forms behind a yawing wind turbine is a complex flow region that can affect the performance of downstream turbines in offshore wind farms. It contains various flow features, including velocity deficit, shear layers, and vortex structures, which evolve in both time and space. Understanding this behavior is important for the design and operation of large-scale offshore wind farms. In this work, large-eddy simulations combined with proper orthogonal decomposition are used to study the wake development behind the National Renewable Energy Laboratory five-megawatt offshore wind turbine under both aligned and yawed inflow conditions. The results indicate that yawing the rotor leads to a lateral shift in the wake and increased asymmetry, with a stronger shear layer forming on one side. This asymmetry promotes enhanced mixing between the wake and the surrounding flow, contributing to a faster downstream recovery of the velocity field. The proper orthogonal decomposition analysis shows that the most energetic modes are associated with large-scale wake deflection and meandering, while higher-order modes correspond to smaller and less stable flow structures within the shear layer. The temporal evolution of these modes illustrates how the wake responds to the yaw maneuver and gradually reaches a new quasi-steady state. Overall, the study provides insight into the influence of yaw on wind turbine wake dynamics and demonstrates the applicability of combining large-eddy simulation with proper orthogonal decomposition for wake analysis in offshore wind farm studies.
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(This article belongs to the Special Issue Offshore Renewable Energy and Related Environmental Science)
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Long-Term Trend and Influencing Factors of Diurnal Sea Surface Temperature in the South China Sea
by
Xiang Li, Jiaqi Luo, Yunfei Zhang, Zhen Shi and Jian Wang
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020024 - 5 Mar 2026
Abstract
The characteristics and causes of the long-term trends of diurnal variation of sea surface temperature (DSST) in the South China Sea (SCS) are investigated in this study based on the global hourly sea surface temperature data generated by the mixed layer model (MLSST)
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The characteristics and causes of the long-term trends of diurnal variation of sea surface temperature (DSST) in the South China Sea (SCS) are investigated in this study based on the global hourly sea surface temperature data generated by the mixed layer model (MLSST) from the National Marine Environmental Forecasting Center (NMEFC) of China. Validation of the MLSST dataset demonstrates excellent agreement with in-situ buoy observations in the SCS with a correlation coefficient of 0.951, confirming its reliability in the SCS. Based on this dataset, the long-term trend of DSST in the SCS exhibits significant seasonal variations with the strongest magnitude in spring and the weakest in winter. Specifically, a significant decreasing trend of −0.0014 °C yr−1 during 1982–2009 transitioned to a pronounced increasing trend of 0.0057 °C yr−1 from 2010–2019. Both climatic factors and local atmospheric variables jointly modulate the DSST in the SCS. On the long-term timescale, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) served as the dominant factor driving DSST changes in most areas of the SCS. After 2010, the PDO shifted to a persistent positive phase, providing a crucial climatic background for the basin-wide DSST increase. While the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) showed enhanced correlation with DSST post-2010, the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) had negligible influence overall. In addition, the SCS summer monsoon played an important regulatory role in shaping the long-term trend of summer DSST by altering air–sea heat exchange processes. Among local atmospheric variables, sea surface wind speed was significantly negatively correlated with DSST, and net heat flux was significantly positively correlated with DSST, with their effects showing regional differentiation. The regulatory role of wind speed dominated in the western SCS, whereas the net heat flux exerted a more prominent impact in parts of the eastern SCS. This work clarifies the spatiotemporal patterns and multi-driver framework governing DSST variability in the SCS, providing a basis for understanding regional ocean–atmosphere interactions.
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(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Progress in Ocean Fronts)
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Coherent Sea Level Variability Between the Sicily Channel and the Ionian Sea: Evidence of a Dynamical Coupling in the Mediterranean Sea
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Ernesto Napolitano, Adriana Carillo, Roberto Iacono, Gianluca Eusebi Borzelli and Maria Vittoria Struglia
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 23; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020023 - 4 Mar 2026
Abstract
This study uses satellite altimeter data from the new AVISO dataset to investigate the coupling between sea level variability in the Sicily Channel and the Ionian Sea. The dataset spans the last three decades (1993–2024) and provides high spatial resolution coverage of the
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This study uses satellite altimeter data from the new AVISO dataset to investigate the coupling between sea level variability in the Sicily Channel and the Ionian Sea. The dataset spans the last three decades (1993–2024) and provides high spatial resolution coverage of the Mediterranean Sea (1/16°, or approximately 7 km). We analyze the variability of the sea surface height through Empirical Orthogonal Function and Singular Value Decomposition techniques applied to the Absolute Dynamic Topography. While the dominant modes of long-term variability reflect the known dynamics of the North Ionian Gyre, the singular value analysis allows us to identify a coherent spatial structure extending from the Sicily Channel to the Northern Ionian Sea. This provides the first observation-based, robust evidence of a dynamical coupling between the two basins, indicating that in the last thirty years the Northern Ionian Gyre is part of a broader, dynamically connected regional system integrating flows from the Sicily Channel. These findings are consistent with previous work, based on a hindcast simulation covering 1980–2010, in which we highlighted the key role of the Atlantic Ionian Stream in shaping interannual to decadal variability in the Northern Ionian Sea. Here, we extend the analysis to the present day, providing the most up-to-date, observation-based assessment of the regional dynamics.
Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ocean Observing Systems: Latest Developments and Challenges)
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Baited-Associated Aggregation of Spinner Sharks in Hulhumale, Maldives: Preliminary Observations and Photo-Identification Tools
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Francesca Romana Reinero, Marco Pireddu, Giacomo Ridella, Lorenzo Valenti, Antonio Pacifico, Francesca Ellero and Primo Micarelli
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 22; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020022 - 2 Mar 2026
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The spinner shark is a widely distributed coastal species that faces significant anthropogenic pressures, yet information on its ecology in the western Indian Ocean remains poorly documented. This study provides preliminary baseline observations on temporal occurrence, sex ratio, and size distribution of a
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The spinner shark is a widely distributed coastal species that faces significant anthropogenic pressures, yet information on its ecology in the western Indian Ocean remains poorly documented. This study provides preliminary baseline observations on temporal occurrence, sex ratio, and size distribution of a bait-attracted spinner shark aggregation in Hulhumale (North Malé Atoll, Maldives) and presents the first individual-level photo-identification (photo-ID) catalogue for the species based on underwater observations. Surveys were conducted in November 2024 and November 2025 using underwater photography, video recordings, and laser photogrammetry. In total, 69 individual spinner sharks were identified using the standard photo-ID protocol which proved to be valid. On the contrary, the preliminary application of the semi-automatic Identifin software indicated possible effectiveness for individual recognition; however, its performance cannot be reliably validated in this area because of poor image quality and environmental turbidity. Six individuals were re-sighted across years, demonstrating the feasibility of non-invasive repeated, long-term monitoring through photo-ID. Although interannual variation in sex ratio of sharks observed was detected (χ2 = 10.56, p = 0.0012), this pattern should be interpreted cautiously due to provisioning-related sampling bias and unequal sampling effort across years. Total length measurements (n = 28) indicated predominantly adult and subadult individuals, with no apparent interannual differences in size distributions. Overall, this study establishes a methodological baseline for spinner shark photo-ID in the Maldives and highlights the importance of multi-year and multi-season monitoring to robustly evaluate aggregation dynamics, site fidelity, and population-level patterns in this region.
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Open AccessArticle
Spring Phytoplankton Bloom Phenology in the Bering Sea and Surrounding Waters Based on MODIS Data
by
Kirill Kivva, Aleksandra Malysheva and Aleksandra Sumkina
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020021 - 26 Feb 2026
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The Bering Sea and its surrounding waters are commercially and ecologically important ecosystems. Knowledge of phytoplankton phenology is crucial for understanding ecosystem dynamics. However, estimates of phenological parameters of spring phytoplankton bloom are sparse for this region. We used the Moderate Resolution Imaging
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The Bering Sea and its surrounding waters are commercially and ecologically important ecosystems. Knowledge of phytoplankton phenology is crucial for understanding ecosystem dynamics. However, estimates of phenological parameters of spring phytoplankton bloom are sparse for this region. We used the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) daily data from 2003–2024 to assess the climatology of phenological parameters. A combination of data regriding, spatial interpolation, and temporal smoothing was applied. Three methods of spatial interpolation for missing data acquisition are compared: iterative first-order neighbor, inverse distance weighted interpolation, and data interpolating empirical orthogonal functions (DINEOF). We suggest that the first outcompetes the other two methods when compared to initial data. Date of the bloom initiation, bloom peak, chlorophyll-a maximum, and duration of the bloom before its peak are evaluated. The spatial distribution of mentioned phenological parameters is presented and discussed. We show that bloom starts early in Bristol Bay, in the narrow band along the eastern shelf, along the Kamchatka Peninsula, and south of the Aleutians and Alaska Peninsula. In the deep Bering Sea, bloom starts surprisingly later considering the latitude of the region. The main reason for this may be the wind mixing during the spring. The first phase of the bloom is generally longer in the deep southern areas (up to 60 days) and shorter in the northern shelf areas (less than 2 weeks in some cases).
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Open AccessReview
The Risks That Cirolanid Isopods Pose to Ocean Resources
by
Murray Thomson
Oceans 2026, 7(2), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7020020 - 25 Feb 2026
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Marine isopods are the ancestors of the harmless herbivorous woodlouse species often found in piles of leaves. In contrast to woodlice, marine isopods of the family Cirolanidae (cirolanid isopods) are scavengers and predatory carnivores that form swarms and can cause damage to fishing
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Marine isopods are the ancestors of the harmless herbivorous woodlouse species often found in piles of leaves. In contrast to woodlice, marine isopods of the family Cirolanidae (cirolanid isopods) are scavengers and predatory carnivores that form swarms and can cause damage to fishing and aquaculture industries. Furthermore, these animals are known to bite swimming and diving humans and therefore may have negative effects on recreational activities in areas where swarms form. One cirolanid isopod species, Cirolana harfordi, displays social behaviour, an attribute that may facilitate the formation of swarms. This species gives live birth, a highly unusual mode of reproduction for an invertebrate and isopod. The rate of viviparous reproduction in C. harfordi is sped up by warmer conditions, indicating the threat that cirolanid isopods pose to ocean resources may intensify with global warming.
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Open AccessArticle
Reorganization of the Arabian Sea Oxygen Minimum Zone in Response to Monsoon Fluctuations During Dansgaard–Oeschger Events 12–11
by
Patricia Silva Rodrigues, Wilfried Bauer and Marlon Carlos França
Oceans 2026, 7(1), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7010019 - 17 Feb 2026
Abstract
Understanding the impact of monsoonal oscillations during past climatic changes in the Arabian Sea is crucial for improving climate model predictions under ongoing global warming. This study investigates whether millennial-scale climate shifts in Greenland, specifically Dansgaard–Oeschger events 12–11, affected the Indian Ocean monsoon
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Understanding the impact of monsoonal oscillations during past climatic changes in the Arabian Sea is crucial for improving climate model predictions under ongoing global warming. This study investigates whether millennial-scale climate shifts in Greenland, specifically Dansgaard–Oeschger events 12–11, affected the Indian Ocean monsoon system and the associated productivity and oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) dynamics in the northwestern Arabian Sea. In the Arabian Sea, DO stadials correspond to reduced water-surface productivity, well-ventilated intermediate water masses, and a weakened or absent OMZ. Contrarily, DO interstadials are distinguished by enhanced water-surface productivity, a reorganization of intermediate water masses, and a reinvigoration of the OMZ. Eleven sediment samples from ODP Site 721A were analyzed using a multiproxy approach combining total organic carbon, C/N ratios, bulk-sediment isotopes (δ15N, δ13C), and the relative abundances of Globigerina bulloides and Globigerinoides ruber, complemented by isotopic data (δ13C, δ18O) from G. ruber shells. Further Mg/Ca–δ18O and δ18Osw measurements were included to refine the reconstruction of surface-water hydrography linked to productivity changes. Results reveal significant oscillations in water-surface productivity and OMZ intensity, modulated by shifts in monsoon strength and water-column ventilation. Enriched δ15N values, elevated TOC, and increased G. bulloides relative abundances reflect intensified denitrification and organic matter preservation under a stronger southwest monsoon, whereas depleted δ15N, reduced TOC, and higher G. ruber abundance indicate enhanced ventilation and a weaker OMZ under northeast monsoon dominance. These findings provide new evidence that refines the paleoceanographic history of the Arabian Sea. Additionally, they demonstrate that high-latitude climatic forcing during DO events modulated Arabian Sea monsoon dynamics and oxygenation through strong interhemispheric teleconnections.
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(This article belongs to the Special Issue Oceans in a Changing Climate)
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Open AccessArticle
A Burning Issue: Interactions of the Bearded Fireworm Hermodice carunculata with Artisanal Fisheries—A Case Study from Malta (Central Mediterranean)
by
Antonia Scicluna and Patrick J. Schembri
Oceans 2026, 7(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans7010018 - 16 Feb 2026
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The bearded fireworm Hermodice carunculata (Polychaeta) has become increasingly problematic in Mediterranean artisanal fisheries, yet remains understudied. This study provides a detailed analysis of interactions between H. carunculata and artisanal fishers in Marsaxlokk, Malta’s largest fishing village. Combining fisher interviews (local ecological knowledge)
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The bearded fireworm Hermodice carunculata (Polychaeta) has become increasingly problematic in Mediterranean artisanal fisheries, yet remains understudied. This study provides a detailed analysis of interactions between H. carunculata and artisanal fishers in Marsaxlokk, Malta’s largest fishing village. Combining fisher interviews (local ecological knowledge) and field data, the study reveals that fishing practices inadvertently sustain and amplify local fireworm populations by discarding worms and by-catch nearshore, thereby providing abundant food sources. The highest fisher activity correlated with significantly denser fireworm populations and smaller-sized individuals, indicating population growth driven by fisher practices. Fireworm predation significantly impacts fishers economically, causing an estimated direct loss of 52.5% of the expected profit across the five onboard sessions, due to damaged catch, along with additional indirect losses from reduced gear efficiency and increased labor. The worm’s painful sting adds further nuisance and discomfort for fishers who frequently handle infested gear. Despite awareness of fireworm behavior, fishers largely did not recognize their practices as exacerbating the issue, creating a feedback loop perpetuating the problem. Behavioral experiments suggested that modifying fishing practices and gear design might mitigate fireworm impacts. Addressing this socio-ecological challenge requires further targeted research, education, and policy support to break the cycle that benefits fireworm proliferation in the region to the detriment of fishers.
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