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2022 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyssa Stasse ◽  
Matthew L. H. Cheng ◽  
Kelsey Meyer ◽  
Nicole Bumbera ◽  
Kaitlin Van Volkom ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 895 (1) ◽  
pp. 012026
Author(s):  
L A Mayorova ◽  
L I Varchenko

Abstract The article considers the objects and main types of ecological tourism on the islands of Peter the Great Bay (Sea of Japan). The accelerated pace of socio-economic development in the Primorsky Krai, its strengthening cooperation with the countries of the Asia-Pacific region (ATR), the annual holding of economic summits in Vladivostok make the tourism industry a promising path of the economic development. The Primorsky Krai is a leader in the development of tourism and recreation in the Far East. Ecological tourism is a journey through nature. The main types of ecological tourism are scientific, educational and recreational ones. A trip to nature should be combined with respect for the latter, the study, protection, and restoration of unique landscapes. Ecological tours are offered to vacationers as an alternative to traditional long-distance travels to foreign countries. The Peter the Great Bay is the largest bay in the Sea of Japan at the coast of Russia. The large and small islands of the bay, the island territories of Vladivostok (Russkiy, Popova and Reineke) and the adjacent waters of the Sea of Japan are natural complexes with a unique nature and favorable climate. Sandy beaches and amazingly beautiful shores, convenient bays and inlets, are good objects for the development of various types of ecological tourism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 201 (3) ◽  
pp. 712-722
Author(s):  
A. S. Tabelskaya ◽  
G. S. Gavrilova

Growth and survival rates of juveniles of pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas are estimated for the first time in conditions of Peter the Great Bay (Japan Sea). The data were collected at artificial hatchery in the Aquaculture Center located on Popov Island in 2019. The juveniles were settled and reared on two types of substrate: 1) perforated plastic plates with the diameter of 30 cm (area 7.1 dm2), and 2) scallop shells with the height about 10 cm (average area 0.8 dm2) mounted in the western Peter the Great Bay (Voevoda Bay) in September 2019. Before placing in this site, the average height of the juveniles’ shells did not exceed 7 mm. In July 2020, after the 9-month exposure of the collectors with spat in the Voevoda Bay, the height increased in 12–18 times and reached 55–90 mm on the substrate 1 and 25–65 mm on the substrate 2. Then the oysters reared on the substrate 1 were replaced from the plastic plates to the cage shelves and the cages were moved to the Stark Strait. Difference in the growth rate became more apparent in September 2020, when the height of shells settled on the plastic plates reached 67 mm, on average (73 % in the range 50–85 mm) and for the shells settled on the scallops — 32 mm, on average (72 % in the range 20–45 mm). The shell height increased to 76.6 and 52.4 mm, respectively, to the end of October 2020. Finally, about 59 % of the oysters reared on the substrate 1 and cage shelves and 9 % of the oysters reared on the substrate 2 reached the commercial size (80–100 mm). Their survival in the period from mid-October 2019 to July 2020 is estimated as 46.9 % (28.8–98.2 %) for the substrate 1 and 33.5 % (4.0–78.3 %) for the substrate 2. On the substrate 1, survival of the mollusks attached to lower surface of the plates was twice higher. The survival had a tendency to decrease with increasing of the juveniles density. The experiment showed good viability for artificially hatched juveniles of pacific oyster in conditions of Peter the Great Bay. Their growth in the Voevoda Bay and the Stark Strait, with necessary technological measures, as replacing, thinning, and substrate cleaning from fouling, allows to produce oysters with the commercial size.


2021 ◽  
Vol 201 (3) ◽  
pp. 600-639
Author(s):  
P. P. Tishchenko ◽  
V. I. Zvalinsky ◽  
T. A. Mikhaylik ◽  
P. Ya. Tishchenko

Studies on hypoxia in Peter the Great Bay (Japan Sea) are reviewed. Seasonal hypoxia is observed in warm season at the bottom of three areas: Amur Bay, Ussuri Bay, and the southwestern part of Peter the Great Bay occupied by the Far-Eastern Marine Biosphere Reserve (FEMBR). Processes of the hypoxia forming are similar in all these areas. The main reason is the dissolved oxygen consumption by microbial degradation of organic matter within topographic depressions in conditions of limited ventilation because of strong summer stratification. The bottom depressions prevent horizontal water exchange and provide accumulation of organic and inorganic suspension, that is another factor important for development of hypoxia. The Amur Bay is the most subjected to hypoxia, being a semiclosed estuarine basin eutrophed by nutrients input from the Razdolnaya River and waste waters of Vladivostok city. The Ussuri Bay has better water exchange and less eutrophication, therefore there are scarce data about hypoxia in this area. FEMBR area has good water exchange and is only episodically influenced by nutrients discharge from the Tumen River, so hypoxia is observed there occasionally. Another consequence of microbial degradation of organic matter in these areas is acidification: pH decreased in 0.5 unit in the bottom water of the Amur Bay in eight decades from 1932 to 2013. Synchronism between regional and global processes of eutrophication, deoxygenation, and acidification of bottom waters is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 201 (3) ◽  
pp. 577-594
Author(s):  
L. N. Kim ◽  
D. V. Izmyatinsky

Biomass and species composition of demersal fish in the bottom biotopes of Peter the Great Bay (Japan Sea) are considered on the data of 2428 trawl catches in 36 surveys conducted by Pacific Res. Inst. of Fisheries and Oceanography (TINRO) in 1978–2009. The most common 20 species are ranked, as the basis of ichthyocenoses, by areas of the bay. The long-term mean total biomass of fish in the bay is estimated as 75,500 t. Arabesque greenling Pleurogrammus azonus, japanese flounder Pseudopleuronectes yokohamae and saffron cod Eleginus gracilis are distinguished by the highest mean biomass. Mean density of fish distribution varied from 6.2 to 19.4 t/km2. It was the highest in the middle Ussuri Bay (13.95 t/km2; mean fish biomass in the area 18,230 t) and in the estuarine areas. Besides, the data on long-term mean biomass of benthos collected in the same trawl surveys and zooplankton sampled in 117 plankton surveys in 1988–2013 are presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1073
Author(s):  
Vitaly K. Fischenko ◽  
Anna A. Goncharova ◽  
Grigory I. Dolgikh ◽  
Petr S. Zimin ◽  
Aleksey E. Subote ◽  
...  

The article describes the technology of express analysis of images and videos, recorded by coastal video monitoring systems, developed by the authors. Its main feature is its ability to measure or evaluate in real time the signals of sea waves, sea level fluctuations, variations of underwater currents, etc., on video recordings or streaming video from coastal cameras. The real-time mode is achieved due to processing video information read not from files, but from the graphic memory of the screen. Measurements of sea signals can be carried out continuously for a long time, up to several days, with high sampling rate, up to 16 Hz, at several points of the observed water area simultaneously. This potentially allows studying the entire spectrum of wave movements, from short waves with periods of 0.3–0.5 s to multi-day fluctuations at the sea level of a synoptic scale. The paper provides examples of the use of this technology for analyzing images and videos obtained in the network of scientific video monitoring of the Peter the Great Bay (Sea of Japan/East Sea), deployed by the authors.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. e0257121
Author(s):  
Alexey M. Trukhin ◽  
Peter A. Permyakov ◽  
Sergey D. Ryazanov ◽  
Vyacheslav B. Lobanov ◽  
Hyun Woo Kim ◽  
...  

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