Brian Popp

Brian Popp
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa | UH Manoa · Department of Earth Sciences

PhD

About

266
Publications
46,884
Reads
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15,182
Citations
Citations since 2017
78 Research Items
6274 Citations
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201720182019202020212022202302004006008001,000
201720182019202020212022202302004006008001,000
Additional affiliations
January 1990 - present
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Position
  • Professor (Full)

Publications

Publications (266)
Article
Tropical islands are simultaneously some of the most biodiverse and vulnerable places on Earth. Water resources help maintain the delicate balance on which the ecosystems and the population of tropical islands rely. Hydrogen and oxygen isotope analyses are a powerful tool in the study of the water cycle on tropical islands, although the scarcity of...
Article
The origin of methylmercury in pelagic fish remains unclear, with many unanswered questions regarding the production and degradation of this neurotoxin in the water column. We used mercury (Hg) stable isotope ratios of marine particles and biota to elucidate the cycling of methylmercury prior to incorporation into the marine food web. The Hg isotop...
Article
Full-text available
Eastern gray whales’ distribution range and plasticity in feeding behavior complicates the understanding of critical life-history such as pregnancy and lactation. Our goal was to determine if females who experienced gestation, gave birth, and lactated their calves, assimilated a high proportion of benthic amphipods from the Bering Sea, which are co...
Article
The geologically complex western aquifers of Hawai‘i Island serve as the primary reservoir of fresh potable water for residents, yet the area’s hydrogeologic characteristics are still not well understood. Groundwater age is a fundamental parameter used to better understand groundwater flow and storage, yet few studies have attempted to estimate app...
Article
Full-text available
Satellite-tracking of adult bumphead sunfish, Mola alexandrini, revealed long-distance latitudinal migration patterns covering thousands of kilometers. Horizontal and vertical movements of four bumphead sunfish off Taiwan were recorded with pop-up satellite archival tags in 2019–2020. Two individuals moved northward and traveled to Okinawa Island a...
Article
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Fossil sloths are regarded as obligate herbivores for reasons including peculiarities of their craniodental morphology and that all living sloths feed exclusively on plants. We challenge this view based on isotopic analyses of nitrogen of specific amino acids, which show that Darwin’s ground sloth Mylodon darwinii was an opportunistic omnivore. Thi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genomic and physiological evidence from some strains of ammonia-oxidizing Thaumarchaeota demonstrate their additional ability to oxidize nitrogen (N) supplied as urea or cyanate, fueling conjecture about their ability to conserve energy by directly oxidizing reduced N from other dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds. Similarly, field studies h...
Article
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The goal of the EXport Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing (EXPORTS) field campaign is to develop a predictive understanding of the export, fate, and carbon cycle impacts of global ocean net primary production. To accomplish this goal, observations of export flux pathways, plankton community composition, food web processes, and optical, phys...
Article
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Trophic ecology of detrital-based food webs is still poorly understood. Abyssal plains depend entirely on detritus and are among the most understudied ecosystems, with deposit feeders dominating megafaunal communities. We used compound-specific stable isotope ratios of amino acids (CSIA-AA) to estimate the trophic position of three abundant species...
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Trophic position and niche width are fundamental components of a species’ ecology, reflecting resource use, and influencing key demographic parameters such as somatic growth, maturation, and survival. Concepts about a species’ trophic niche space have important implications for local management and habitat protection, and can shed light about resil...
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Zooplankton contribute a major component of the vertical flux of particulate organic matter to the ocean interior by packaging consumed food and waste into large, dense fecal pellets that sink quickly. Existing methods for quantifying the contribution of fecal pellets to particulate organic matter use either visual identification or lipid biomarker...
Article
Marine particles play a key role in the cycling of most elements in the ocean. Particles are typically operationally defined by their collection method and, therefore, span a wide size range, within which chemical properties and interactions may be heterogeneous. The 12 papers in this collection address the challenges associated with studying parti...
Article
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Compound‐specific isotope analyses (CSIA) and multivariate “isotope fingerprinting” track biosynthetic sources and reveal trophic interactions in food webs. However, CSIA have not been widely applied in the study of marine symbioses. Here, we exposed a reef coral (Montipora capitata) in symbiosis with Symbiodiniaceae algae to experimental treatment...
Article
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Significance Mercury is a globally distributed neurotoxic pollutant that can be biomagnified in marine fish to levels that are harmful for consumption by humans and other animals. The degree to which mercury has infiltrated the oceans yields important information on the biogeochemistry of mercury and its expected effects on fisheries during changin...
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The isotopic composition of baleen whales’ epidermis structural layers can give information about dietary change over time. This study investigated if epidermis layers integrated isotopic values that record physiological changes from gestation to lactation. Epidermis tissues (n = 43) were collected from free ranging lactating female gray whale and...
Article
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Compound specific nitrogen isotope analysis of amino acids (AA CSIA) has been used to study the trophic ecology of many marine organisms because of its ability to characterize the δ15N value at the base of a food web while simultaneously providing trophic position information from a single tissue sample of a consumer. Although application of this m...
Article
Sponges are ecologically important components of many marine ecosystems and are abundant benthic fauna on coral reefs. Mycale grandis is an alien invasive sponge found on many partially degraded shallow water coral ecosystems in Hawai‘i. Mycale grandis is known to compete spatially with dominant native reef building coral such as Montipora capitata...
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The project captured a subset of the hydrological cycle for the tropical island of O'ahu, linking precipitation to groundwater recharge and aquifer storage. We determined seasonal storm events contributed more to aquifer recharge than year‐round baseline orographic trade wind rainfall. Hydrogen and oxygen isotope values from an island‐wide rain col...
Article
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Hadal trenches house distinct ecosystems but we know little about their sources of nutrition or trophic structures. We evaluated megafaunal food web structure and nutritional sources in the Kermadec and Mariana trenches using carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis (δ¹⁵N and δ¹³C values) of bulk tissues and proteinaceous individual amino acids...
Article
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The fate of organic matter (OM) in the deep ocean remains enigmatic, with little understood regarding the flux and its utilization by deep food webs. We used compound‐specific nitrogen stable isotope ratios of source amino acids measured in particle size classes and deep zooplankton (700–1500 m) to determine the contribution of small (0.7–53 μm) vs...
Article
The photochemical degradation of the neurotoxin methylmercury (MeHg) in marine surface waters is of great interest because it reduces the amount of MeHg available for uptake and bioaccumulation in marine aquatic food webs. Studies have shown that the dominant cause of odd isotope mass independent fractionation (odd-MIF) of Hg in marine foodwebs is...
Article
Local meteoric water lines (LMWL) and corresponding relationships between δ2H and δ18O values in precipitation and elevation are useful tools for assessing groundwater recharge areas and flow paths. The LMWL and relationship between δ18O values in precipitation and elevation for the West Hawai‘i region of Hawai‘i (USA) were determined utilizing a n...
Article
Midwater zooplankton are major agents of biogeochemical transformation in the open ocean; however their characteristics and activity remain poorly known. Here we evaluate midwater zooplankton biomass, amino acid (AA)-specific stable isotope composition (δ¹⁵N values) using compound-specific isotope analysis of amino acids (CSIA-AA), trophic position...
Article
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Many sponges host abundant and active microbial communities that may play a role in the uptake of dissolved organic matter (DOM) by the sponge holobiont, although the mechanism of DOM uptake and metabolism is uncertain. Bulk and compound-specific isotopic analysis of whole sponge, isolated sponge cells, and isolated symbiotic microbial cells of the...
Article
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Reef corals are mixotrophic organisms relying on symbiont-derived photoautotrophy and water column heterotrophy. Coral endosymbionts (Family: Symbiodiniaceae), while typically considered mutualists, display a range of species-specific and environmentally mediated opportunism in their interactions with coral hosts, potentially requiring corals to re...
Article
Particle dynamics are an essential component of global ocean biogeochemistry as they transport essential nutrients, carbon, and other reactive elements and compounds from the surface ocean to depth in the water column. The North Pacific Ocean is characterized by spatial and temporal variations in particle export mediated by a diverse food web and v...
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According to modern oceanographic perspectives that emphasize microbial pathways, phagotrophic protists comprise one to several levels of intermediate consumers between phytoplankton and larger metazooplankton (copepods and krill). However, recent attempts to quantify pelagic trophic structure in the open ocean using nitrogen stable isotope techniq...
Article
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The oceans are an important global reservoir for mercury (Hg), and marine fish consumption is the dominant human exposure pathway for its toxic methylated form. A more thorough understanding of the global biogeochemical cycle of Hg requires additional information on the mechanisms that control Hg cycling in pelagic marine waters. In this study, Hg...
Article
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Ocean warming and the increased prevalence of coral bleaching events threaten coral reefs. However, the biology of corals during and following bleaching events under field conditions is poorly understood. We examined bleaching and postbleaching recovery in Montipora capitata and Porites compressa corals that either bleached or did not bleach during...
Article
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Many species of micronekton perform diel vertical migrations (DVMs), which ultimately contributes to carbon export to the deep sea. However, not all micronekton species perform DVM, and the nonmigrators, which are often understudied, have different energetic requirements that might be reflected in their trophic ecology. We analyze bulk tissue and w...
Article
Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) can account for a large fraction of the dissolved nitrogen (N) pool in the ocean, but the cycling of marine DON is poorly understood. Recent discoveries that urea‐ and cyanate‐N can be oxidized by some strains of Thaumarchaeota suggest that these abundant microbes may be able to access and oxidize a fraction of the...
Article
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Evaluating long-term drivers of foraging ecology and population productivity is crucial for providing ecological baselines and forecasting species responses to future environmental conditions. Here, we examine the trophic ecology and habitat use of North Atlantic leatherback turtles (St. Croix nesting population) and investigate the effects of larg...
Article
Aquaponics recycles nitrogen from nitrogen-rich aquaculture effluent into organic crops (fish and vegetables/fruits) in hydroponic grow beds. Fundamental understanding of nitrogen transformations in aquaponics is critically important to improve nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) within aquaponics systems and to reduce release of environmentally harmful...
Preprint
Full-text available
Ocean warming and the increased prevalence of coral bleaching events threaten coral reefs. However, the biology of corals during and following bleaching events under field conditions is poorly understood. We examined bleaching and post-bleaching recovery in Montipora capitata and Porites compressa corals that either bleached or did not bleach durin...
Article
Full-text available
Habitat connectivity and trophic shifts during the lifetime of an individual fish are important determinants of fish population growth and persistence, yet remain little understood for many species. We investigated whether insights into individual lifetime migration, trophic position (TP) and environmental nitrogen dynamics could be achieved using...
Article
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Tools to study seasonal changes in animal diets are needed to address a wide range of ecological questions. This is especially true of migratory animals that experience distinct environments where diets may be substantially different. However, tracking diets of individuals that move vast distances has proven difficult. Compound-specific isotope ana...
Presentation
Pacific islands water resources are particularly vulnerable to contamination because the islands typically have small watersheds, permeable geologic substrates, and short subsurface pollutant residence times, all resulting in minimal natural remediation. We have applied a multi-tracer source-tracking approach in Kāneʻohe Bay watershed, located on t...
Article
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Mid-summer peaks in the abundance of Thaumarchaeota and nitrite concentration observed on the Georgia, USA, coast could result from in situ activity or advection of populations from another source. We collected data on the distribution of Thaumarchaeota, ammonia-oxidizing betaproteobacteria (AOB), Nitrospina, environmental variables and rates of am...
Article
Temporal trends in levels of biomagnifying contaminants, such as mercury (Hg), in top predators can provide insights into changes in contaminant bioavailability through time. However, interpreting contaminant temporal trends in predators can be confounded by temporal changes in their diets which, in turn, could affect organism trophic position and...
Article
Several studies have found that the respiratory demand for carbon by the mesopelagic community exceeds carbon supply through the particulate sinking flux by up to two to three orders of magnitude, suggesting that mesopelagic communities rely on additional overlooked carbon sources. Suspended particles (defined as 0.7-53 μm) have been suggested as o...
Poster
We have applied a novel approach using radon, δ15N and δ18O values of nitrate, and contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) to identify groundwater pathways of anthropogenic contaminants. This approach was applied in Kāneʻohe watershed, located on the windward side of Oʻahu, which has been subject to persistent near shore water pollution. Previous r...
Article
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Hadal trenches are isolated habitats that cover the greatest ocean depths (6,500-11,000m) and are believed to host high levels of endemism across multiple taxa. A group of apparent hadal endemics is within the snailfishes (Liparidae), found in at least five geographically separated trenches. Little is known about their biology, let alone the reason...
Article
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The complex biogeochemical cycle of Hg makes identifying primary sources of fish tissue Hg problematic. To identify sources and provide insight into this cycle, we combined carbon (δ13C), nitrogen amino acid (δ15NPhe), and Hg isotope (Δ199Hg, Δ201Hg, δ202Hg) data for six species of Hawaiian marine bottomfish. Results from these isotopic systems ide...
Article
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Stable isotopic compositions in animal tissues have been widely used to gain insight into trophic dynamics, especially of mobile aquatic predators whose behavior and dietary preferences are difficult to directly measure. Olive ridley sea turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) range across >3 million km2 of the tropical and subtropical eastern Pacific Ocea...
Article
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Groundwater inputs are typically overlooked as drivers of environmental change in coastal reef studies. To assess the impact of groundwater discharge on reef biogeochemistry, we examined two fringing reef environments, located in Maunalua Bay on the south shore of O'ahu, Hawai'i, that receive large inputs of submarine groundwater discharge. We supp...
Article
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Abstract: Allochthonous nutrient flow from marine sources via seabirds to the terrestrial habitats where they nest can impact resident organisms and neighboring ecosystems. Seabird populations are decreasing both in Hawai‘i and globally, yet little is known about what is being lost from the ecosystems where they traditionally nested in large number...
Article
The origins and lifeways of the inhabitants of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), a remote island in the southeast Pacific Ocean, have been debated for generations. Archaeological evidence substantiates the widely accepted view that the island was first settled by people of Polynesian origin, as late as 1200 CE [1-4]. What remains controversial, however, is...
Article
Nitrogen is a key nutrient for fish and vegetable productions in aquaponic systems. However, the fate of nitrogen in aquaponic systems has not been fully understood, leading to difficulty in optimizing nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) and plant production. In this study, the fate of nitrogen in floating-raft aquaponic systems with two plant species, p...
Article
Compound-specific isotopic analysis of amino acids (CSIA-AA) has emerged in the last decade as a powerful approach for tracing the origins and fate of nitrogen in ecological and biogeochemical studies. This approach is based on the empirical observation that source amino acids (AAs)s (i.e., phenylalanine), fractionate ¹⁵N very littl