Daniel Ottmann
@danielottmann.bsky.social
📤 16
📥 20
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Marine Biology & Ecology
https://dottmann.github.io/
This is an incredible opportunity to showcase the talent and creativity of early-career researchers in marine science! Previous keynote speakers have told me it was one of the highlights of their careers — a chance to share their work on an international stage.
add a skeleton here at some point
3 months ago
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reposted by
Daniel Ottmann
ICES - International Council for the Exploration of the Sea
9 months ago
Join us for an inspiring journey in August at
#InterDis
summer school 2025. Debbi Pedreschi will be your guide as you explore integrated ecosystem assessments - an interdisciplinary tool for ecosystem-based marine management 🔔Sign up now - Applications close 15 May 🔔
www.ices.dk/news-and-eve...
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reposted by
Daniel Ottmann
ICES - International Council for the Exploration of the Sea
9 months ago
🌊 Calling all early-career scientists ICES
#SIIECS
& Mission Atlantic return with
#InterDis
, a summer school for interdisciplinary ocean management using
#IEA
📍 Copenhagen, Denmark 10–15 August 2025 🏫32 spots available - applications close 15 May 2025.
www.ices.dk/news-and-eve...
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Daniel Ottmann
Ken H Andersen
about 1 year ago
Finally in print: R package of the FEISTY global fish community model. Fast Fortran backend with an R interface makes it fast and easy to use FEISTY for your own applications. Used in the EU projects
#NECCTON
and
@oceanicu.bsky.social
.
doi.org/10.1111/2041...
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FEISTY Fortran library and R package to integrate fish and fisheries with biogeochemical models
The FishErIes Size and functional TYpe model (FEISTY) is a mechanistic ecosystem model that fully integrates ecosystem structure across trophic levels through functional types. We present an R pa...
http://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.14465
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Daniel Ottmann
Ken H Andersen
12 months ago
Our online simulator of the FEISTY fish community model is now live. Simulate the food web structure fish communities based on bottom depth and zooplankton production:
oceanlife.dtuaqua.dk/FEISTY/
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reposted by
Daniel Ottmann
Ken H Andersen
11 months ago
Squid die when they reproduce. We estimate that sinking squid carcasses locks away 11-12 Mt carbon/year in the deep oceans. Increasing squid fisheries interrupts this sequestration and sends it to our dinner plates - where it is respired to the atmosphere.
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
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