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The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is a system of ocean currents that has an essential role in Earth's climate, redistributing heat and influencing the carbon cycle. The AMOC has been shown to be weakening in recent years ; this decline may reflect decadal-scale variability in convection in the Labrador Sea, but short observational datasets preclude a longer-term perspective on the modern state and variability of Labrador Sea convection and the AMOC. Here we provide several lines of palaeo-oceanographic evidence that Labrador Sea deep convection and the AMOC have been anomalously weak over the past 150 years or so (since the end of the Little Ice Age, LIA, approximately AD 1850) compared with the preceding 1,500 years. Our palaeoclimate reconstructions indicate that the transition occurred either as a predominantly abrupt shift towards the end of the LIA, or as a more gradual, continued decline over the past 150 years; this ambiguity probably arises from non-AMOC influences on the various proxies or from the different sensitivities of these proxies to individual components of the AMOC. We suggest that enhanced freshwater fluxes from the Arctic and Nordic seas towards the end of the LIA-sourced from melting glaciers and thickened sea ice that developed earlier in the LIA-weakened Labrador Sea convection and the AMOC. The lack of a subsequent recovery may have resulted from hysteresis or from twentieth-century melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet . Our results suggest that recent decadal variability in Labrador Sea convection and the AMOC has occurred during an atypical, weak background state. Future work should aim to constrain the roles of internal climate variability and early anthropogenic forcing in the AMOC weakening described here.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0007-4 | DOI Listing |
Nat Ecol Evol
September 2025
Department of Biology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA.
Theory predicts that high population density leads to more strongly connected spatial and social networks, but how local density drives individuals' positions within their networks is unclear. This gap reduces our ability to understand and predict density-dependent processes. Here we show that density drives greater network connectedness at the scale of individuals within wild animal populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study of larval transport and recruitment in the deep sea is crucial to the understanding of species distributions, community assembly, and the potential effects of anthropogenic activity and climate change on the maintenance of biodiversity. This study sought to better understand the role of substratum features in deep-sea larval recruitment at high latitudes. Four settlement frames composed of blocks of different substrata (mesh, plastic, stone, and wood) were deployed for 9 to 13 months at bathyal depths in the Labrador Sea (northeastern Canada).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eukaryot Microbiol
August 2025
Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Nanoplanktonic diatoms (2-20 μm) are a significant yet historically understudied component of marine ecosystems. We investigated three recently isolated nanoplanktonic diatoms from the Northwest Atlantic Ocean (NWA): Minidiscus spinulatus, Mediolabrus comicus, and Minidiscus trioculatus. Using Oxford Nanopore sequencing, we assembled and annotated their complete chloroplast and mitochondrial genomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fish Biol
July 2025
Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) have experienced significant population declines in eastern Canada for the past 30 years, primarily attributed to at-sea mortality. To identify factors contributing to smolt body size, which has been associated with variations in survival, we examined various predictors in linear mixed-effect models using data from out-migrating smolts collected from 2000 to 2016 at three rivers: Conne River (NFLD), de la Trinité River (QC) and St. Jean River (QC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
July 2025
Département des Sciences Historiques, Université Laval, Quebec, Quebec G1V 0A6, Canada.
This study used stable isotope analysis (SIA) of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) of pinniped (seal) bone collagen from two Inuit archaeological sites in Nunatsiavut (Labrador, Canada), Oakes Bay 1 (HeCg-08) and Uivak Point 1 (HjCl-09). We use SIA to examine the relationship between Inuit communities and pinnipeds between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries CE, specifically the kinds of environments from which people harvested seals, exploring the environmental, social and economic factors influencing seal hunting. During this period in Nunatsiavut, temperatures fluctuated, European colonial presence increased and extensive social changes occurred among the Inuit, including a shift in settlement patterns.
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