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  1. Diatom-dominated blooms in coastal upwelling systems contribute disproportionately to global primary production. The fate of carbon captured during a diatom bloom is often influenced by species-specific ecological differences. However, successional patterns that take place during a diatom bloom are often oversimplified, and the diversity of diatom adaptations to different stages of a bloom remains poorly characterized. To improve our understanding of diatom specificity to certain conditions within a bloom, we employed microscopy, 18S rRNA amplicons, and biogeochemical analysis within a simulated upwelling mesocosm experiment. We successfully simulated a diatom bloom and found that diatoms bloomed during early and late phases of the bloom. Surprisingly, the relative abundance of congeneric diatoms with the Thalassiosira, Chaetoceros, and Pseudonitzschia displayed opposing patterns that were consistent among experimental mesocosms. The late stage of the bloom was especially interesting because some diatoms continued to bloom among mixotrophic dinoflagellate genera Akashiwo, Heterocapsa, and Prorocentrum. Additionally, Syndiniales putative parasites were correlated with several diatoms, especially in the initial phase of the bloom. The novel observations of consistent rapid successional changes within our mesocosms reflect the ability of diatom and dinoflagellate genera to occupy bloom conditions that fall outside traditional expectations. Syndiniales parasite co-occurrence with blooming diatoms may be important to successional trends of coastal diatom populations, and this parasitic interaction deserves further study in coastal upwelling systems. This study indicates there are underlying diatom traits and biotic interactions that should be considered when estimating their contribution to productivity and carbon cycling within upwelling systems. 
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  2. We present the first measurement of cosmic-ray fluxes of Li 6 and Li 7 isotopes in the rigidity range from 1.9 to 25 GV. The measurements are based on 9.7 × 10 5 Li 6 and 1.04 × 10 6 Li 7 nuclei collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station from May 2011 to October 2023. We observe that over the entire rigidity range the Li 6 and Li 7 fluxes exhibit nearly identical time variations and, above 4 GV , the time variations of Li 6 , Li 7 , He, Be, B, C, N, and O fluxes are identical. Above 7 GV , we find an identical rigidity dependence of the Li 6 and Li 7 fluxes. This shows that they are both produced by collisions of heavier cosmic-ray nuclei with the interstellar medium and, in particular, excludes the existence of a sizable primary component in the Li 7 flux. Published by the American Physical Society2025 
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  3. We report the properties of precision time structures of cosmic nuclei He, Li, Be, B, C, N, and O fluxes over an 11-year solar cycle from May 2011 to November 2022 in the rigidity range from 1.92 to 60.3 GV. The nuclei fluxes show similar but not identical time variations with amplitudes decreasing with increasing rigidity. In particular, below 3.64 GV the Li, Be, and B fluxes, and below 2.15 GV the C, N, and O fluxes, are significantly less affected by solar modulation than the He flux. We observe that these differences in solar modulation are linearly correlated with the differences in the spectral indices of the cosmic nuclei fluxes. This shows, in a model-independent way, that solar modulation of galactic cosmic nuclei depends on their spectral shape. In addition, solar modulation differences due to nuclei velocity dependence on the mass-to-charge ratio ( A / Z ) are not observed. Published by the American Physical Society2025 
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  4. Precision measurements by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) on the International Space Station of the deuteron ( D ) flux are presented. The measurements are based on 21 × 10 6 D nuclei in the rigidity range from 1.9 to 21 GV collected from May 2011 to April 2021. We observe that over the entire rigidity range the D flux exhibits nearly identical time variations with the p , He 3 , and He 4 fluxes. Above 4.5 GV, the D / He 4 flux ratio is time independent and its rigidity dependence is well described by a single power law R Δ with Δ D / He 4 = 0.108 ± 0.005 . This is in contrast with the He 3 / He 4 flux ratio for which we find Δ He 3 / He 4 = 0.289 ± 0.003 . Above 13 GV we find a nearly identical rigidity dependence of the D and p fluxes with a D / p flux ratio of 0.027 ± 0.001 . These unexpected observations indicate that cosmic deuterons have a sizable primarylike component. With a method independent of cosmic ray propagation, we obtain the primary component of the D flux equal to 9.4 ± 0.5 % of the He 4 flux and the secondary component of the D flux equal to 58 ± 5 % of the He 3 flux. Published by the American Physical Society2024 
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  5. MeerKAT’s large number (64) of 13.5 m diameter antennas, spanning 8 km with a densely packed 1 km core, create a powerful instrument for wide-area surveys, with high sensitivity over a wide range of angular scales. The MeerKAT Galaxy Cluster Legacy Survey (MGCLS) is a programme of long-track MeerKAT L -band (900−1670 MHz) observations of 115 galaxy clusters, observed for ∼6−10 h each in full polarisation. The first legacy product data release (DR1), made available with this paper, includes the MeerKAT visibilities, basic image cubes at ∼8″ resolution, and enhanced spectral and polarisation image cubes at ∼8″ and 15″ resolutions. Typical sensitivities for the full-resolution MGCLS image products range from ∼3−5 μJy beam −1 . The basic cubes are full-field and span 2° × 2°. The enhanced products consist of the inner 1.2° × 1.2° field of view, corrected for the primary beam. The survey is fully sensitive to structures up to ∼10′ scales, and the wide bandwidth allows spectral and Faraday rotation mapping. Relatively narrow frequency channels (209 kHz) are also used to provide H  I mapping in windows of 0 <  z  < 0.09 and 0.19 <  z  < 0.48. In this paper, we provide an overview of the survey and the DR1 products, including caveats for usage. We present some initial results from the survey, both for their intrinsic scientific value and to highlight the capabilities for further exploration with these data. These include a primary-beam-corrected compact source catalogue of ∼626 000 sources for the full survey and an optical and infrared cross-matched catalogue for compact sources in the primary-beam-corrected areas of Abell 209 and Abell S295. We examine dust unbiased star-formation rates as a function of cluster-centric radius in Abell 209, extending out to 3.5 R 200 . We find no dependence of the star-formation rate on distance from the cluster centre, and we observe a small excess of the radio-to-100 μm flux ratio towards the centre of Abell 209 that may reflect a ram pressure enhancement in the denser environment. We detect diffuse cluster radio emission in 62 of the surveyed systems and present a catalogue of the 99 diffuse cluster emission structures, of which 56 are new. These include mini-halos, halos, relics, and other diffuse structures for which no suitable characterisation currently exists. We highlight some of the radio galaxies that challenge current paradigms, such as trident-shaped structures, jets that remain well collimated far beyond their bending radius, and filamentary features linked to radio galaxies that likely illuminate magnetic flux tubes in the intracluster medium. We also present early results from the H  I analysis of four clusters, which show a wide variety of H  I mass distributions that reflect both sensitivity and intrinsic cluster effects, and the serendipitous discovery of a group in the foreground of Abell 3365. 
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