Publications
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Zooplankton and its role in North Sea food webs : community structure and selective feeding by pelagic fish in Belgian marine waters Ghent University
Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in stressed environments : primary producers and consumers at the basis of marine food webs Ghent University
Bioconversion of fatty acids at the basis of marine food webs: insights from a compound-specific stable isotope analysis Ghent University
Zooplankton and its role in North Sea food webs: community structure and selective feeding by pelagic fish in Belgian marine waters Research Institute for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
Bioconversion by harpacticoids at the basis of marine food webs: evidence from fatty acid-specific isotope analysis Ghent University
The role of bioconversion by harpacticoids at the basis of marine food webs: combining fatty acids and stable isotope tracers Ghent University
Biomagnification of anthropogenic and naturally-produced organobrominated compounds in a marine food web from Sydney Harbour, Australia University of Antwerp
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and naturally-produced organobrominated compounds, such as methoxylated PBDEs (MeO-PBDEs), have been scarcely studied in the Southern Hemisphere. Yet, sources of the latter group of compounds were found in Southern regions, specifically in Australia. The environmental distribution and biomagnification potential of organobrominated compounds were therefore investigated in a representative aquatic food chain ...
Carbon transfer in herbivore- and microbial loop-dominated pelagic food webs in the southern Barents Sea during spring and summer Ghent University
We compared carbon budgets between a herbivore - domina led and a microbial loop-dominated food web and examined the implications of food web structure for fish production. We used the southern Barents Sea as a case study and inverse modelling as an analysis method. In spring, when the system was dominated by the herbivorous web, the diet of protozoa consisted of similar amounts of bacteria and phytoplankton. Copepods showed no clear preference ...