FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa

A recent study demonstrated that a tidal strait, where a shoaled and constricted waterway increases tidally driven sub-ice currents and turbulence, represent ice algal production hotspots due to a hypothesized enhanced ocean-ice nutrient supply. Based on these findings, we sampled the bottom-ice alg...

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Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Canadian Watershed Information Network (CanWIN) 2022
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Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:a91f822bfa878963e08c79c3cbcf35daddfdb9fab48f1b53a7e39cbd2cc135af
id dataone:sha256:a91f822bfa878963e08c79c3cbcf35daddfdb9fab48f1b53a7e39cbd2cc135af
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:a91f822bfa878963e08c79c3cbcf35daddfdb9fab48f1b53a7e39cbd2cc135af 2024-11-03T19:45:06+00:00 FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa BEGINDATE: 2017-04-28T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-05-12T00:00:00Z 2022-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:a91f822bfa878963e08c79c3cbcf35daddfdb9fab48f1b53a7e39cbd2cc135af unknown Canadian Watershed Information Network (CanWIN) Nutrients Lipid Ice algae Chlorophyll Arctic Biomass Photosynthetically available radiation Ice cores Particulate organic carbon Diatoms Dataset 2022 dataone:urn:node:CANWIN 2024-11-03T19:17:37Z A recent study demonstrated that a tidal strait, where a shoaled and constricted waterway increases tidally driven sub-ice currents and turbulence, represent ice algal production hotspots due to a hypothesized enhanced ocean-ice nutrient supply. Based on these findings, we sampled the bottom-ice algal community across the same tidal strait between the Finlayson Islands within Dease Strait, Nunavut, Canada in spring 2017. Our objective was to examine sea ice diatom cellular responses to two expected nutrient supply gradients in their natural environment: (1) a spatial gradient across the tidal strait and (2) a vertical gradient up into the bottom-ice matrix. Two diatom taxa, Nitzschia frigida and Attheya spp. within the bottom-ice sections (0-2, 2-5, and 5-10 cm) under thin snow cover (<5 cm) were selected for Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrochemical analysis for lipid and protein content. Results from the FTIR technique strongly supported the existence of a spatial nutrient gradient across the tidal strait of the Finlayson Islands, while particulate organic carbon (POC) and chlorophyll a (Chl a) concentration estimates were difficult to interpret. Spatially, the larger N. frigida cells appeared to be more sensitive to the nutrient gradient, significantly increasing (decreasing) in lipid (protein) content towards the outside of the tidal strait. In contrast, the epiphytic diatom, Attheya spp., was more sensitive to the vertical gradient, where above 2 cm into the bottom-ice matrix, the non-motile cells were trapped with a depleted nutrient inventory and evidence of a post-bloom state. Application of the FTIR technique to estimate algal cell biomolecular composition provided new insights on the response of the bottom-ice algal community to the examined nutrient supply gradients that could not be attained from conventional bulk measurements alone. Therefore, future studies are encouraged to employ the use of this technique. Dataset consists of multiple tabs: 1. Metadata 2. Nitzschia frigida data 3. Attheya spp. data 4. Ice Algae Community 5. Diatom Population 6. FTIR Target Cells 7. Nutrients 8. POC & Chl a 9. PAR 10. Snow & Ice measurements Dataset Arctic ice algae Nunavut Sea ice Canadian Watershed Information Network (CanWIN) (via DataONE) Arctic Canada Dease Strait ENVELOPE(-107.502,-107.502,68.834,68.834) Finlayson Islands ENVELOPE(-105.969,-105.969,69.084,69.084) Nunavut
institution Open Polar
collection Canadian Watershed Information Network (CanWIN) (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:CANWIN
language unknown
topic Nutrients
Lipid
Ice algae
Chlorophyll
Arctic
Biomass
Photosynthetically available radiation
Ice cores
Particulate organic carbon
Diatoms
spellingShingle Nutrients
Lipid
Ice algae
Chlorophyll
Arctic
Biomass
Photosynthetically available radiation
Ice cores
Particulate organic carbon
Diatoms
FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
topic_facet Nutrients
Lipid
Ice algae
Chlorophyll
Arctic
Biomass
Photosynthetically available radiation
Ice cores
Particulate organic carbon
Diatoms
description A recent study demonstrated that a tidal strait, where a shoaled and constricted waterway increases tidally driven sub-ice currents and turbulence, represent ice algal production hotspots due to a hypothesized enhanced ocean-ice nutrient supply. Based on these findings, we sampled the bottom-ice algal community across the same tidal strait between the Finlayson Islands within Dease Strait, Nunavut, Canada in spring 2017. Our objective was to examine sea ice diatom cellular responses to two expected nutrient supply gradients in their natural environment: (1) a spatial gradient across the tidal strait and (2) a vertical gradient up into the bottom-ice matrix. Two diatom taxa, Nitzschia frigida and Attheya spp. within the bottom-ice sections (0-2, 2-5, and 5-10 cm) under thin snow cover (<5 cm) were selected for Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrochemical analysis for lipid and protein content. Results from the FTIR technique strongly supported the existence of a spatial nutrient gradient across the tidal strait of the Finlayson Islands, while particulate organic carbon (POC) and chlorophyll a (Chl a) concentration estimates were difficult to interpret. Spatially, the larger N. frigida cells appeared to be more sensitive to the nutrient gradient, significantly increasing (decreasing) in lipid (protein) content towards the outside of the tidal strait. In contrast, the epiphytic diatom, Attheya spp., was more sensitive to the vertical gradient, where above 2 cm into the bottom-ice matrix, the non-motile cells were trapped with a depleted nutrient inventory and evidence of a post-bloom state. Application of the FTIR technique to estimate algal cell biomolecular composition provided new insights on the response of the bottom-ice algal community to the examined nutrient supply gradients that could not be attained from conventional bulk measurements alone. Therefore, future studies are encouraged to employ the use of this technique. Dataset consists of multiple tabs: 1. Metadata 2. Nitzschia frigida data 3. Attheya spp. data 4. Ice Algae Community 5. Diatom Population 6. FTIR Target Cells 7. Nutrients 8. POC & Chl a 9. PAR 10. Snow & Ice measurements
format Dataset
title FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
title_short FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
title_full FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
title_fullStr FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
title_full_unstemmed FTIR Autecological Analysis of Bottom-Ice Diatom Taxa
title_sort ftir autecological analysis of bottom-ice diatom taxa
publisher Canadian Watershed Information Network (CanWIN)
publishDate 2022
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:a91f822bfa878963e08c79c3cbcf35daddfdb9fab48f1b53a7e39cbd2cc135af
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 2017-04-28T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-05-12T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-107.502,-107.502,68.834,68.834)
ENVELOPE(-105.969,-105.969,69.084,69.084)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Dease Strait
Finlayson Islands
Nunavut
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Dease Strait
Finlayson Islands
Nunavut
genre Arctic
ice algae
Nunavut
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
ice algae
Nunavut
Sea ice
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